No-go theorem

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.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.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.
No-ghost theoremtheoretical physicstheoremproof by contradictionAntidynamo theoremsmagnetic fieldsdynamoEarnshaw's theorempoint chargesequilibriumelectrostaticBell's theoremKochen–Specker theoremPBR theoremNo-hiding theoremNo-cloning theoremQuantum no-deleting theoremNo-teleportation theoremNo-broadcast theoremno-communication theoremquantum information theoryVon Neumann's no hidden variables proofWeinberg–Witten theoremLorentz-covariantstress-energygravitonquantum field theoryNielsen–Ninomiya theoremchirallattice theoryfermionsHaag's theoreminteraction pictureHegerfeldt's theoremcausalityrelativistic quantum theoryColeman–Mandula theoremHaag–Łopuszański–Sohnius theoremGoddard–Thorn theoremcompactificationtype IIBcompactwarp factorfluxesReeh–Schlieder theoremNo-hair theoremProof of impossibilitymathematicsArrow's impossibility theoremJournal for General Philosophy of ScienceStudies in History and Philosophy of ScienceBibcodeBecker, M.Schwarz, J.H.