-https://wiki.lspace.org/mediawiki/ChelonautChelonaut
Chelonauts are space explorers sent under the Great A'Tuin in an attempt to discover its gender. The only known attempts were made by Krull, the only Discworld island to hang over the Rim, and were told about in The Colour of Magic. These were lowering a glass box over the rim, and the more famous voyage in The Potent Voyager, which was taken over by Rincewind and Twoflower. It is also possible that Carrot Ironfoundersson, Rincewind and Leonard da Quirm, when they traveled in the Kite in The Last Hero can by considered chelonauts, because they did go under the Disc.
Chelonauts, according to the description, wear space costumes which look suspiciously like the ones Erich von Daniken thought he saw in prehistoric cave pictures.
They spik a längwîdj wìth löts ðøv åccëntêd kåråcters, which gives it a distinctly Scandiwegian look.
The question is: could quarks be broken down in smaller pieces too? And those pieces of quarks, could they be further broken down, etc. etc. ad infinitum?
Could there be no "bottom" to that stuff we call matter? Could it be "particles all the way down"? — Olivier5
It's a meaningful objection to the idea that CERN will find the answer to the OP anytime soon — Olivier5
Conceptually, anything can be broken down into smaller pieces. — Olivier5
The problem becomes more about how any complexity in the forms of higher level crud, such as quarks, or Higgs fields, manages to survive. — apokrisis
The standard model predicts the Big Bang should have produced equal amounts of matter and antimatter – but that’s a combustive mixture that would have annihilated itself, leaving nothing behind to make galaxies or planets or people.
To explain the mystery, physicists have been playing spot the difference between matter and antimatter – searching for some discrepancy that might explain why matter came to dominate.
So far they’ve performed extremely precise measurements for all sort of properties: mass, electric charge and so on, but no difference has yet been found 1 .
CERN physicists recently declared that according to their best estimates, the Universe ought not to exist at all, as the matter and antimatter really should have cancelled each other out. — Wayfarer
The question is: could quarks be broken down in smaller pieces too? And those pieces of quarks, could they be further broken down, etc. etc. ad infinitum? — Olivier5
- What does the second turtle rest on? — Olivier5
Until it proves otherwise, of course.Physics has shown that material particles only "break down" as far as their simplest possible symmetry states. — apokrisis
Okay, I get it. But what are the pathways and "steps" from a cosmic sea of U1 photons to, say, a quark, a proton, or an atom (or several)? Do we have all the "steps" plotted? Or does it look more like an infinite series of intermediary states between the U1 photon sea and an atom?So putting aside the technicalities, physics has flipped the whole issue. The mathematics of symmetry tell us what is the simplest possible ground state of material being. The nearest to a vanilla nothingness. A cosmic sea of U1 photons. The problem becomes more about how any complexity in the forms of higher level crud, such as quarks, or Higgs fields, manages to survive, and thus give us a materiality that needs describing in the fashion of turtles stacked high. — apokrisis
I'm not saying something is "made of quarks". Only that something can be broken down into quarks. There's a difference.By the time you get to quarks, saying that something is "made of" quarks means very little. — SophistiCat
Fair enough, there is a slight difference, but you get the point of the metaphor nevetheless. — Olivier5
Most quantum physicists have reluctantly abandoned the ancient theory of Atomism : self-existent particles at the bottom --- the rest is all Void. Instead they have devised a Field Theory to describe fundamental Reality. But a "field" is essentially an empty space (void) where statistically possible Virtual particles could suddenly-and-without-warning become Actual particles. In that case, you could say that reality is Ghost particles all the way down. But I prefer a less spooky theory. :joke:Could there be no "bottom" to that stuff we call matter? Could it be "particles all the way down"? — Olivier5
most importantly, there's a sense of a limit where this will go - I suppose an ultimate final level of particulate matter is expected beyond which it doesn't make sense to ask what that particle is made up of? — TheMadFool
That's exactly the point of the thread: is there a limit to how fine we can "grind" matter? — Olivier5
Given our current technology we can only go so far, but technology can and does evolve.[in practice,] we may not be able to actually subdivide particles of extremely small size. — TheMadFool
Matter has no “bottom”, no “foundation”. It’s turtles all the way down. — Olivier5
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