excuse me, and i know it's rude of me to just barge in after so much time but - since you identified yourself as a physics prof i dont really know where to ask this at six in the morning. I was just listening to an old bit by someone on gravitons and string theory (not claiming to understand but trying and i think scientific ebooks or casts make for great soothing background noise) - i do weird things all the time after all.
Turns out gravitons as i google it , like 95% of reality according to what i read here some time before ;-) , are not proven to exist due to some mathematical problem but it says its masless and therefor travels at the speed of light (in theory) and it just got in my head "negative mass"
Is there anything you know of that writes about negative mass or has anyone taken it into account (mathematically speaking) in a way that i might be able to read or understand lol.
I mean what does that do to einsteins most famous and what does that do to the whole universe if 95% is already missing ? That would mean even more because the negative mass would have to be subtracted from the numbers but the particles would be there ? or not ?
just wondering, right, totally okay if you dont answer, its been a while after all .. i hope you dont get beeps on your phone from steemit at 6am
and i hope you're ok ...
and i'm sure you're very busy, have a great day !!