Now if this were so then also real particles would be math. — EugeneW
What is an excitation? A field is just a mathematical aid which consists of distributions assigned to all points of spacetime, and these distributions have operators as "value". These operators are creation and annihilation operators. These operators create or annihilate one particle states in so-called Fock-space, a direct product of single particle Hilbert spaces. A free particle field is just a particle with a single momentum state or, when localized, a normalized superposition of a spectrum. In a Feynman diagram, there is one line only and begin and end state have the same momentum. The particle is localized if it has a spectrum of momenta. If it has a well defined position though there are infinite associated momenta, due to uncertainty — EugeneW
no creation and destruction of particles (only couplings) — EugeneW
So, what is a particle? A particle is a tiny geometrical Planck-sized structure on which charge can safely reside, without leaking out. The extra space dimensions in which it exists are perpendicular to the 3D bulk and this ensures that the Planck length is Lorenz invariant (for which physics still has no answer...). The smallest measurable distance (the Planck length) follows naturally from the particles small extension in space. Within the bounds of the wavefunction (the temporal cross section of a field) the particle just hops around erratically if you propagate it in time. Which is to say it travels on tiny parts of all paths Feynman talks about, coupling to the timeless virtual field to reach others, and being itself a time extended virtual particle with its antiparticle component somewhere in space. — EugeneW
But what makes it 'hop'? and what do you mean by 'hop'? Are you relating this to the proposed motion of an electron in orbit around a nucleus? A jump from an outer orbit to an orbit closer to the nucleus?
Does your particle jump right or left, then move forward for a time and then jump left or right again — universeness
When you view the image of the hydrogen atom, why do you think the 'electron/cloud orbit' looks like it is made up of many much smaller quanta? and why does some of this quanta seem to 'break into' the 'blue area' between these concentric circular areas? — universeness
If the fundamental quanta are in-fact 'field excitements' and have 'no definte edge' and are 'cloud like' etc then does this not open all sorts of other possibilities for whats really happening during experiments like the double slit? Maybe its true that if you do fire a photon, one at a time towards two slits that due to the fact that there are none of its type near it, its cloud like structure spreads out and passes through both slits. This is pure conjecture on my part and I await and expect the suggestion to be quickly dismissed but I just suggest it merely as one of those 'other possibilities' I am trying to percieve. Any others? — universeness
To me, 'non-locally' means globally, so do you mean that this particle just spontaneously appears and disappears at ransom positions in your 5D space and that no time passes between hops so time=0 during hops. Does this not suggest that the actual movement occurs within your suggested 4th spatial dimension? and this is why no relative time passes within our experiential 3D space and your particle can traverse 3D space 'instantly,' without breaking the law of c within 3D space?The particle hops around non-locally, instantaneously. — EugeneW
We were thinking of hydrogen at the same time! — EugeneW
Well, the hydrogen atom is in the link in the OP. — universeness
Ah! The photograph of hydrogen. See all the specks? The electron hops constantly between all of them. Within the bounds of the wavefunction. QFT is difficult to use for a bound state. QFT only works for particles that are initially and finally free (asymptotically free). The position and velocity are well defined at all times in this picture of QM — EugeneW
I think all of the specs together ARE THE ELECTRON. The electron is not a single sphere in orbit around the nucleus. Its a 'smear' or 'cloud' orbiting the sphere, but a cloud or smear of what? — universeness
I think all of the specs together ARE THE ELECTRON. The electron is not a single sphere in orbit around the nucleus. Its a 'smear' or 'cloud' orbiting the sphere, but a cloud or smear of what? — universeness
How can it be smeared out? — EugeneW
It can look smeared out if it hops like mad from one place to another. Prrrrrr.... hophophophophop..... If you imagine the s orbital, it's not everywhere at once but shortly after another it's here, there, there, making up the wavefunction — EugeneW
How does this topic and its description relate to philosophy? — Alkis Piskas
Kis who? — EugeneW
Why won't you tell me what you mean by 'particle coupling,' for example? — universeness
If you think that questions like whether "the fundamental quanta are in-fact 'field excitements' and have 'no definte edge' and are 'cloud like' etc." are abstract ideas and belong to metaphysics, it's fine with me. :smile:Metaphysica. You can't discuss this on physics fora. — EugeneW
questions like whether "the fundamental quanta are in-fact 'field excitements' and have 'no definte edge' and are 'cloud like' etc." are abstract ideas and belong to metaphysics, — Alkis Piskas
I had to look up "interloper" ... I learned a new word today. Thanks! :smile:I have admitted in the past to being an interloper here Alkis. I — universeness
That could be maybe nice, but, as I often mention, I'm bad in Physics! :smile:I am sure you can find a philosophical aspect, relevant to the thread — universeness
I didn't say that. But nice try ... Turning the negative element of my stetement to positive. You should be a journalist! :grin:questions like whether "the fundamental quanta are in-fact 'field excitements' and have 'no definte edge' and are 'cloud like' etc." are abstract ideas and belong to metaphysics,
— Alkis Piskas
I couldn't agree less! That's why I find it rather strange that these concepts are seen as physical reality. — EugeneW
That could be maybe nice, but, as I often mention, I'm bad in Physics! — Alkis Piskas
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