Pardon please. Maybe your avatar somehow suggested it. Whatever. I guess wolves in dog's clothing (or is it the other way round?) are ubiquitous.
Am I in a quest for tachyon speeds?
All right. I read that a tachyon is any particle accelerated beyond lightspeed, so presumably that would be photons also.
My reading of #15.
So while physicists have got photons to interact in a glass tube, they have not done so in vacuo, and in vacuo photons never interact.
Never is not correct. In extreme environments like the core of a newly formed neutron star, gamma-ray photons are basically always scattering off each other. But super rare for that to happen in normal situations. That second linked Wiki article of your #35 explains under what conditions photons do mutually interact.
All right. But in the glass, if they do do this, then is it not theoretically possible beyond the glass, with enough engineering? I apologize: I'm not a physicist.
In another thread was discussed why photons go slower in glass, and one sensible explanation is that in glass you really don't just have a photon but a polariton which involves a collective excitation of many polarized atoms. Interactions between polaritons are possible that in vacuo are never observed.
Also, what are the advantages of in vacuo? Does this just reflect a kind of parallel to in vitro vs. in vivo? I suppose that the idea to "bumper" a photon does require multiple photons. But is this... special or limiting in scope or something?
The medium, whether vacuum or glass, sets the speed of light therein. Interactions owing either to high energy gamma-ray collisions in vacuo, or non-linearity in say glass, redistribute energy (photon frequencies and/or particle production) but cannot alter the fundamental constraint on c set by a given medium.
[Slight correction; dispersion occurs in say dielectric media, which means c is a generally modest function of photon frequency. So it's more accurate to say photons of a given frequency always propagate at c for that frequency in a given media. There is no dispersion in vacuum.]
In yet another thread, Cherenkov radiation came up. Not photons, but charged particles e.g. electrons moving faster than c in say water may be thought of as 'tachyonic' in a limited sense but it's a far cry from a 'genuine' tachyon moving faster than c in vacuo. 'Tachyonic' high-energy electrons in a medium slow down as they emit radiation, whereas a 'real' in vacuo tachyon would speed up. Anyway photons simply refuse to move at anything other than c in a given medium. Massless particles are all like that:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Massless_particle
And I'm burning midnight oil. Bye.