Re: Particle Radii
- From: "FrediFizzx" <fredifizzx@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sun, 27 Nov 2005 12:48:15 -0800
"Autymn D. C." <lysdexia@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:1133067774.926335.185200@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
| FrediFizzx wrote:
| > OK, not an effective low energy radius then. HEP as not been able
to
| > measure the charge radius of electrons, etc. Yet... if there is
one.
| > As they go higher and higher in energy, it just keeps looking more
| > point-like. I think they are at around 10^-19 meters now which is
way
|
| This is the most idiotic scientific reasoning I've ever seen, akin to
| the biblical geocentrist arguments made up in order to fit the
| observations, or the wild inductions used to "prove" that a geometric
| continuum exists. You do not know what "size" in "particle size"
| means. It's not an upper energy cutoff; it's the one-time field's
| limit from its one-time mass-energy. Electrons have a minimum mass by
| their background energy; their size /then/ is their standard size, two
| classic electron radii wide. They are /never/ points, only hollow
| balls of different sizes. Transmutations happen when different
| particles of different sizes become the same size and tostick.
Hey! I am just the messenger here. If you can find any data from
experiments on electron, muon, or tau charge radius, pass them onto us
here. Note the keyword *internal* that you snipped out. For me,
leptons do have an *external* structure due to relativistic and quantum
"vacuum" effects.
FrediFizzx
http://www.vacuum-physics.com/QVC/quantum_vacuum_charge.pdf
or postscript
http://www.vacuum-physics.com/QVC/quantum_vacuum_charge.ps
http://www.vacuum-physics.com
.
- References:
- Particle Radii
- From: main_engineering
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- Re: Particle Radii
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- Re: Particle Radii
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