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Can neutrinos travel faster than light?

I'm probably way in over my head with this question, but as I understand it a neutrino particle can disappear from point A and appear at, say for arguements sake, point B. Now is there a trackable path or have I got it right that quantum physics can't it en-route between these points. If this is so then does that mean that sub-atomic particles able to do this might be traveling faster than light, because I thought that was the pinnacle of speed in the universe? Young of Japan suggests that (by my understanding) they possibly change form and can't be detected in their new form by the lab's equipment. Does anyone have a theory on any of this?

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Categories: Our universe.

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