Is an Electron a black hole singularity?
- From: Zilla <zillazip82@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 14 Feb 2008 06:14:32 -0800 (PST)
Is a bare electron a black hole singularity?
An electron is made up of bare electron with infinite charge plus
the virtual particles dressing.
More accurately, this implies bare electron is not an electron
at all since an electron assumes both the infinite bare
core plus the dressed infinite virtual particles (both infinities
cancel out by renormalization giving our experimental values).
So a "bare electron" with infinite charge smaller than planck
scale is not definable within ordinary spacetime (this is the
reason and justification for quantum gravity.. or gravity inside
planck scale).
This means a "bare electron" which doesn't exist in normal
spacetime could be a black hole singularity or something weirder
like perhaps another universe or the sum totality of all existence
(remember "As above so below")?
What do you think?
Z.
.
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