No-go theorem

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Template:Short description Script error: No such module "Distinguish". In theoretical physics, a no-go theorem is a theorem that states that a particular situation is not physically possible. This type of theorem imposes boundaries on certain mathematical or physical possibilities via a proof by contradiction.[1][2][3]

Instances of no-go theorems

Full descriptions of the no-go theorems named below are given in other articles linked to their names. A few of them are broad, general categories under which several theorems fall. Other names are broad and general-sounding but only refer to a single theorem.

Classical electrodynamics

Non-relativistic quantum mechanics and quantum information

Quantum field theory and string theory

General relativity

  • No-hair theorem, black holes are characterized only by mass, charge, and spin

Proof of impossibility

Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". In mathematics there is the concept of proof of impossibility referring to problems impossible to solve. The difference between this impossibility and that of the no-go theorems is that a proof of impossibility states a category of logical proposition that may never be true; a no-go theorem instead presents a sequence of events that may never occur.

See also

References

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External links

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