All the lepton masses from G, pi, e

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In summary, the conversation revolved around using various equations and formulae to approximate the values of fundamental constants such as the Planck Mass and the fine structure constant. The discussion also delved into the possibility of using these equations to predict the masses of leptons and other particles. Some participants raised concerns about the validity of using such numerical relations, while others argued that it could be a useful tool for remembering precise values.

Multiple poll: Check all you agree.

  • Logarithms of lepton mass quotients should be pursued.

    Votes: 21 26.6%
  • Alpha calculation from serial expansion should be pursued

    Votes: 19 24.1%
  • We should look for more empirical relationships

    Votes: 24 30.4%
  • Pythagorean triples approach should be pursued.

    Votes: 21 26.6%
  • Quotients from distance radiuses should be investigated

    Votes: 16 20.3%
  • The estimate of magnetic anomalous moment should be investigated.

    Votes: 24 30.4%
  • The estimate of Weinberg angle should be investigated.

    Votes: 18 22.8%
  • Jay R. Yabon theory should be investigate.

    Votes: 15 19.0%
  • I support the efforts in this thread.

    Votes: 43 54.4%
  • I think the effort in this thread is not worthwhile.

    Votes: 28 35.4%

  • Total voters
    79
  • #1
arivero
Gold Member
3,429
140
Plus c and h, of course.

The idea is to collect here in only a thread all the approximations voiced out during the summer. Surely this is to be quarantinised in TheoryDev, but it is interesting enough to be kept open as a thread (if closed, please be free to use my http://www.infoaragon.net/servicios/blogs/conjeturas/index.php?idarticulo=200410041 [Broken])

First we get Planck Mass, [tex]M_P[/tex], from G, c and h as usual.

Then we solve for [tex]\alpha[/tex], the fine structure constant, in HdV second equation (*),

[tex]
\alpha^{-1/2}+ (1+{\alpha \over 2 \pi }) \alpha^{1/2}=e^{\pi^2 \over 4}
[/tex]

The term in parenthesis, well, is sort of a first order correction.

Then we use http://wwwusr.obspm.fr/~nottale/ukmachar.htm to get the mass of the electron

[tex]
\ln (M_P/m_e) = \alpha^{-1} \sin^2 \theta_W
[/tex]

where the square sine of Weinberg angle [tex]\theta_W[/tex] is to be rather misteriously taken at the GUT value, 3/8. I have not checked if the need of Schwinger correction above counterweights this need of a value running up to GUT scale.

Now we use http://www.chip-architect.com/news/2004_07_27_The_Electron.html [Broken] to get in sequence the mass of the muon, via the rather strange

[tex]
\ln {m_\mu \over m_e}= 2\pi - 3 {1\over \pi}
[/tex]

and the mass of tau via the simpler

[tex]
\ln {m_\tau \over m_\mu}= \pi - {1\over \pi}
[/tex]

Alternatively HdV set of equations can be presented from a quotient [tex]m_e m_\tau^n / m_\mu^{n+1}[/tex], but the original presentation hints of a hyperbolic sine, or perhaps a q-group scent.

We could try to follow towards the full mass matrix, including neutrinos, via some empirical approximations collected by Mikanata and Smirnov.

----
(*) Update: HdV has uploaded to his webpage an indication of the origin of his formula, as a 3rd term truncation of a peculiar series.
 
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  • #2
I do not imagine that this will be quarantined, these numerical relations are not your personal theory that you are developing and promoting. Rather, you are reporting on the possible follies (or wisdom) of others.

Even if this may be the work of dope-crazed hippies and Wiccan moon-worshipers, we should not be blind to the knowledge that it exists. How else shall each of us know what numerology is? At the very least, it is a very good vaccination against the temptations of numerical coincidence.
 
  • #3
Also it is a high barrier for guessers. I do not know anyone deriving such high precision with so small formulae (specially HdV ones have a small error). So any posting of numerology should be requested to have at least this effectivity, or to shut up. In this sense yes, it is a very effective vacunation.

BTW, while I am using here "numerology" to adhere to the broader view of this word, to me it is numerology only the use or arbitrary dimensional constants (inches/year for a famous example), while using arbitrary adimensional ones is more an issue of compacteness of infomation. Here, at least, one can use HdV relations as a mean to remember almost exactly the values of some fundamental constants; for somebody it can be easier to remember the formulae than the decimal number expressions.
 
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  • #4

Mathematics used for the Fine Structure constant formula.


Yes it should be called Mathematics rather than "Numerology"
This is especially true for the way how the formula for the
fine structure constant was generated.

It's possible to derive a function's complete Taylor expansion
from a single point and its infinitesimal small environment.
A similar "Taylor like" method was used here to derive an
entire function from a single (but highly accurate) number:

The tricky point is the start. We need to find the start of the
function presuming that a function exists and it can be expressed
as a converging series.

A successful ansatz turned out to be to express the amplitude
[itex]\alpha^{1/2}[/itex] as a "Gaussian like" value:

[tex]\alpha^{1/2}\approx e^{-{\pi^{2}/4}}[/tex]

From here on we can develop a corrective series A by taking
successive differences so that:

[tex]\alpha^{1/2}\equiv Ae^{-{\pi^{2}/4}}[/tex]

This generates the following series A:

[tex]A = 1+{\alpha \over (2\pi)^0 }(1+{\alpha \over (2\pi)^1 }(1+{\alpha \over (2\pi)^2 }( 1 + ...[/tex]

or separated:

[tex]A = 1+{\alpha \over (2\pi)^0 }+{\alpha^2 \over (2\pi)^1 }+{\alpha^3 \over (2\pi)^3 } + ...[/tex]

The series converges straightforward to reproduce the value
of the fine structure constant exact in all its digits:


after term 0: 0.0071918833558268
after term 1: 0.0072972279174862
after term 2: 0.0072973525456204
after term 3: 0.0072973525686533
f.s. constant 0.007297352568.(+/-24)



I hope that everybody realizes how incredible small the
possibility is that something like this happens by chance.
Say the fine structure constant is some arbitrary number
and then we get the whole series out it with an overall
precision better than one in ten billion !

Basically the only thing I have "put in" the formula was the
ansatz [itex]e^{-{\pi^{2}/4}}[/itex]. The rest is generated by repeatedly
subtracting the two numbers.


Regards, Hans.

Fine Structure constant article online

PS. The formula given in Alejandro's opening post represents
the series truncated after term 2.
 
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  • #5
arivero said:
Now we use http://www.chip-architect.com/news/2004_07_27_The_Electron.html [Broken] to get in sequence the mass of the muon, via the rather strange

[tex]
\ln {m_\mu \over m_e}= 2\pi - 3 {1\over \pi}
[/tex]

and the mass of tau via the simpler

[tex]
\ln {m_\tau \over m_\mu}= \pi - {1\over \pi}
[/tex]

Alternatively HdV set of equations can be presented from a quotient [tex]m_e m_\tau^n / m_\mu^{n+1}[/tex], but the original presentation hints of a hyperbolic sine, or perhaps a q-group scent.
Your challenge, should you choose to accept it, is to estimate the probability of finding two numbers (any two of the three lepton mass ratios) using only some 'simple' functions, pi, e (and any other 'cool' transcendentals), a few small integers (preferably <5, though a bunch of contiguous primes would also count as 'cool'), to within 0.1% (more points if 0.01%). You may also write a simple program - to generate the 'formulae' - or even an 'evolutionary' meta-program (which will all but guarrantee to find at least one formula meeting the input criteria).
We could try to follow towards the full mass matrix, including neutrinos, via some empirical approximations collected by Mikanata and Smirnov.
Better yet, since the neutrino masses are known to have only upper limits, why not make some firm predictions (based on goat entrails, er, sorry, magic formulae)? While we're at it, how about the Higgs? the LSSP? neutralinos, axions, wimpzillas, ... the whole zoo?
 
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  • #6
wimpzillas
I lost mine and have been unable to replace them :tongue2:

I agree with Neired : the probability that you find a relevant relation with "numerical experiments" is far from obviously non-vanishing.
 
  • #7
humanino said:
wimpzillas
I lost mine and have been unable to replace them :tongue2:

I agree with Neired : the probability that you find a relevant relation with "numerical experiments" is far from obviously non-vanishing.

Yes, because we expect there is at least one such relation. And some of us hope it to be simple (well, a quantum group sounds "simple" to me :biggrin:) and geometrical. Still, it should be good if Mathematica (TM) skilled people were able to make some symbolic experiments to find out such formulae and their probability.
 
  • #8
Nereid said:
Better yet, since the neutrino masses are known to have only upper limits, why not make some firm predictions (based on goat entrails, er, sorry, magic formulae)? While we're at it, how about the Higgs? the LSSP? neutralinos, axions, wimpzillas, ... the whole zoo?

Stop, stop (I mean the verb, not the SUSY particle)... the relations I was referring to, for neutrino -thus leptonic- mixing angles, are still considered good taste in the real world. Of course, your mileage can vary.
 
  • #9
Hans, let us focus on your approximate equation about alpha

I expect you know that Oxford U. Press is publishing a book called Universe or Multiverse containing an article by Smolin that presents a testable scientific theory that the dimensionless fundamental constants have gone through an interation process called CNS (cosmic natural selection).

CNS would have favored convergence to constants optimized for starformation and black hole production. This is not the "Anthropic Principle" in one of its non-empirical forms---it makes testable predictions, it is falsifiable, it is not predicated on life or "consciousness", it is a simple physical theory which may in fact be wrong but seems worth testing.

I would like to understand your equation for alpha because it seems to me to be the sort of thing which might arise from an optimality condition in some iterative cosmology like CNS.

It is, as you say, mathematics. And therefore I have quoted arivero introduction

arivero said:
Then we solve for [tex]\alpha[/tex], the fine structure constant, in HdV second equation (*),

[tex]
\alpha^{-1/2}+ (1+{\alpha \over 2 \pi }) \alpha^{1/2}=e^{\pi^2 \over 4}
[/tex]

The term in parenthesis, well, is sort of a first order correction.

Now you have a longer equation representing successive approximations.
I would like to see this written out more explicitly.

And by the way, the value I have at hand for alpha is
0.007 297 352 533(27)

and the value which you get for alpha is
0.007 297 352 568 653...

In case you want to look at Smolin's article in that Universe or Multiverse book, the preprint is
http://arxiv.org/abs/hep-th/0407213

I do not think that your equation is necessarily in conflict with an iterative evolutionary model (although such equations in isolation, like a mysterious man dressed only in a raincoat, may scandalize and outrage propriety)

Here is the abstract on hep-th/0407213

Scientific alternatives to the anthropic principle
Lee Smolin
Comments: Contribution to "Universe or Multiverse", ed. by Bernard Carr et. al., to be published by Cambridge University Press.

"It is explained in detail why the Anthropic Principle (AP) cannot yield any falsifiable predictions, and therefore cannot be a part of science. Cases which have been claimed as successful predictions from the AP are shown to be not that. Either they are uncontroversial applications of selection principles in one universe (as in Dicke's argument), or the predictions made do not actually logically depend on any assumption about life or intelligence, but instead depend only on arguments from observed facts (as in the case of arguments by Hoyle and Weinberg). The Principle of Mediocrity is also examined and shown to be unreliable, as arguments for factually true conclusions can easily be modified to lead to false conclusions by reasonable changes in the specification of the ensemble in which we are assumed to be typical.
We show however that it is still possible to make falsifiable predictions from theories of multiverses, if the ensemble predicted has certain properties specified here. An example of such a falsifiable multiverse theory is cosmological natural selection. It is reviewed here and it is argued that the theory remains unfalsified. But it is very vulnerable to falsification by current observations, which shows that it is a scientific theory.
The consequences for recent discussions of the AP in the context of string theory are discussed."
 
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  • #10
Hans de Vries said:
[tex]\alpha^{1/2}\equiv Ae^{-{\pi^{2}/4}}[/tex]

This generates the following series A:

[tex]A = 1+{\alpha \over (2\pi)^0 }(1+{\alpha \over (2\pi)^1 }(1+{\alpha \over (2\pi)^2 }( 1 + ...[/tex]

or separated:

[tex]A = 1+{\alpha \over (2\pi)^0 }+{\alpha^2 \over (2\pi)^1 }+{\alpha^3 \over (2\pi)^3 } + ...[/tex]

If I apply a step of Middleschool algebra to your equation, what I get is:

[tex]e^{\pi^{2}/4}\alpha^{1/2} = 1+{\alpha \over (2\pi)^0 }+{\alpha^2 \over (2\pi)^1 }+{\alpha^3 \over (2\pi)^3 } + ...}[/tex]


[tex]e^{\pi^{2}/4} = \alpha^{-1/2} +{\alpha^{1/2} \over (2\pi)^0 }+{\alpha^{3/2} \over (2\pi)^1 }+{\alpha^{5/2} \over (2\pi)^3 } + ...}[/tex]

apologies for tinkering like this, just want to see how it looks when kneaded a bit

so let's imagine that instead of the number 137.0359991 (or whatever it is believed to be now) we want its square root 11.7062376... and let us define
a function

[tex] F(X) = X +{X^{-1} \over (2\pi)^0 }+{X^{-3} \over (2\pi)^1 }+{X^{-5} \over (2\pi)^3 } + {X^{-7} \over (2\pi)^6 }...[/tex]

So then if we solve the equation

[tex] F(X) = e^{\pi^{2}/4}[/tex]

then according to you, HdV, the solution X will turn out to
be this famous universal number 11.70623762...
which so far has only been determined by experimental measurement.

heh heh

shocking

:smile:
 
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  • #11
marcus said:
And by the way, the value I have at hand for alpha is
0.007 297 352 533(27)

and the value which you get for alpha is
0.007 297 352 568 653...

I did use the NIST value of 0.007 297 352 568 (24)

Nist web page for alpha

Regards, Hans
 
  • #12
Hans de Vries said:

Mathematics used for the Fine Structure constant formula.


Yes it should be called Mathematics rather...

Hmm the kind of mathematics of Ramanujan, perhaps
 
  • #13
arivero said:
Stop, stop (I mean the verb, not the SUSY particle)... the relations I was referring to, for neutrino -thus leptonic- mixing angles, are still considered good taste in the real world. Of course, your mileage can vary.
Apologies :redface:

Neutrino (and other lepton) mixing angles are, as you say, not at all like numerology, and coming at ratios from a good theoretical direction is of course a worthwhile exercise, in very good taste.

Wrt to your other post, I did some playing around a while ago, and found that it's extraordinarily easy to get some 'cool' numbers, to within 1%. For example, you can always change a really big number to something between 0 and 10 (or maybe 20 or so), simply by taking a log (natural or otherwise). [tex] \pi^2[/tex] is pretty close to 10, and various x-n, where x is a cool integer or trancendental, make a nice toolkit for fine tuning (+ or -, integer powers, etc). It's only slightly more difficult to create things that look like they're the first couple or three terms of a series. Which is why I think it's important to demand a prediction before any proposal is treated seriously. Or perhaps there's too much diamond dust in my drink.
 
  • #14
Hans de Vries said:
I did use the NIST value of 0.007 297 352 568 (24)

Nist web page for alpha

Regards, Hans

I see that your value is more up-to-date, and more accurate than what I was using. Thanks.
 
  • #15
Nereid said:
Wrt to your other post, I did some playing around a while ago, and found that it's extraordinarily easy to get some 'cool' numbers, to within 1%
I partly agree, but with a couple of caveats. First, that even if it is easy, it has some merit, as I have never seen extraordinary precision in most of the cranks webpages. Some of them even alter the value of the constants to fit into their theories! Some 'cool' relationships can be always found, of course. Larsson, and indirectly Lubos, brought a couple of famous ones:
Thomas Larsson said:
1/alpha = pi + pi^2 + 4*pi^3 = 137.0363038
m_proton / m_electron = 6*pi^5 = 1836.118109
TL attributes the second one to Lubos, but I have read it attributed to Feynman himself, just as an example of the kind we are discussing, random relationships. It could be interesting to know the origin of the first one to alpha, as it is a variant of KdV idea.

(Incidentaly, the third part of Wilczek "Plannk mountain" article touchs a bit the relationship between Planck scale and proton scale)

Secondly, I find in the first set of de Vries' relations a bit more of symmetry that usual. The form (q^1 - q^-1) is very geometrical, and it is very appealing that it happens between muon and tau, somehow marking the end of the number of generations. The fact of being able to find the same format for the quotient between first and second generation is also amazing as a coincidence. It let's you a lot of freedom to manipulate the relationship, for instance you can write a pair of equations
[tex]{m_e m_\tau^2 \over m_\mu^3}=e^\pi, \;
{m_e m_\tau^3 \over m_\mu^4}=e^{\frac1\pi}[/tex]

The appeal of this format is, again, that it does not give trivial room to "predict" more generations.


PS: The Mikanata Smirnov paper I was referring before is hep-ph/0405088. They refer to a conjectured relation between Cabibbo angle and the quotient tau/muon
 
  • #16
Alejandro, and anyone else interested, have any of us checked the full HdV equation to see if the approximation is as good as he says?

With all respect to HdV, sometimes people make numerical error and it is good to have an independent verification.

In fact i tried to check it with my calculator and perhaps I did something wrong but I did not get such a good approximation as his post led me to expect So my calculation may be at fault. I would appreciate if someone else try it.

Here is my calculation

The inverse alpha number is 137.0359991 and I will assume that we want a formula for its square root 11.7062376...

Let us define this function

[tex] F(X) = X +{X^{-1} \over (2\pi)^0 }+{X^{-3} \over (2\pi)^1 }+{X^{-5} \over (2\pi)^3 } + {X^{-7} \over (2\pi)^6 } +...[/tex]

HdV post leads me to expect that if we solve for X in the equation

[tex] F(X) = e^{\pi^{2}/4}[/tex]

then the solution X will turn out to be 11.70623762...

Conversely, if I plug in this value for X then I should get (to a good approximation) the exp(pi^2/4) number, which is 11.79176...

So I expect

[tex] F(11.70623762...) = 11.79176...[/tex]

But I didn't get very close to this. BTW I was avoiding roundoff error by using 137.0359991 to build even powers of 11.70623762, so there is not the most obvious explanation. Can anyone help?
 
  • #17
Oh oh,
I redid the calculation, using inverse alpha = 137.03599911, which I get from NIST website.
And using as the square root the approximation 11.70623762

and what do you think?
when I plug these into the function F(X) defined here, then I get 11.79176139.

But this is also equal, to the limit of the accuracy of my hand calculator, the exp(pi^2/4) number, which is also 11.79176139, or so my calculator says.

such coincidences are rare, maybe I am still doing something wrong, or the calculator battery is low. or I am dreaming this. Please someone else check the calculation

marcus said:
...
...
Here is my calculation

The inverse alpha number is 137.03599911 and I will assume that we want a formula for its square root 11.70623762...

Let us define this function

[tex] F(X) = X +{X^{-1} \over (2\pi)^0 }+{X^{-3} \over (2\pi)^1 }+{X^{-5} \over (2\pi)^3 } + {X^{-7} \over (2\pi)^6 } +...[/tex]

... if I plug in this value for X then I should get (to a good approximation) the exp(pi^2/4) number, which is 11.79176139...

So I expect

[tex] F(11.70623762...) = 11.79176139...[/tex]

... BTW I was avoiding roundoff error by using 137.03599911 to build even powers of 11.70623762...

Here is the form of F(X) I used in the calculation

[tex] F(X) = X(1 +{X^{-2} \over (2\pi)^0 }+{X^{-4} \over (2\pi)^1 }+{X^{-6} \over (2\pi)^3 } )[/tex]

this way all the powers of X are even and one can use 137.03599911, reducing the amount of arithmetic, then at the end there is one multiplication by 11.70623762
 
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  • #18
It's OK :smile:

X = sqrt(137.03599911) = 11.7062376154766

11.7062376154766 = X
00.0854245431237 = X^-1 /(2pi)^0
00.0000992128957 = X^-3 /(2pi)^1
00.0000000183389 = X^-5 /(2pi)^3

=================================
11.7917613898350 = exp(pi^2/4)

_3.1415926536222 = pi (measured...)
_3.1415926535897 = pi (exact)


Regards, Hans

Tip: The Windows calculator is exact to 32 digits.
 
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  • #19
Hans de Vries said:
It's OK :smile:

X = 11.7062376154

11.7062376154766 = X
00.0854245431237 = X^-1 /(2pi)^0
00.0000992128957 = X^-3 /(2pi)^1
00.0000000183389 = X^-5 /(2pi)^3

=================================
11.7917613898350 = exp(pi^2/4)

_3.1415926536222 = pi (measured...)
_3.1415926535897 = pi (exact)


Regards, Hans

so when did you first see this?

also it is maybe not so important but what do you mean by the "measured" value of pi?
 
  • #20
Rilke has a funny sonnet about mohammed being in a cave and
a visitor comes and shows him something. it could be like the experience of seeing this. do you read German? I will see if I can find the poem
Yes, here it is:

Mohammeds Berufung


Da aber als in sein Versteck der Hohe,
sofort Erkennbare: der Engel, trat,
aufrecht, der lautere und lichterlohe:
da tat er allen Anspruch ab und bat
bleiben zu dürfen der von seinen Reisen
innen verwirrte Kaufmann, der er war;
er hatte nie gelesen - und nun gar
ein solches Wort, zu viel für einen Weisen.


Der Engel aber, herrisch, wies und wies
ihm, was geschrieben stand auf seinem Blatte,
und gab nicht nach und wollte wieder: Lies.
Da las er: so, dass sich der Engel bog.
Und war schon einer, der gelesen hatte
und konnte und gehorchte und vollzog.
 
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  • #21
marcus said:
so when did you first see this?

also it is maybe not so important but what do you mean by the "measured" value of pi?

I did checked it before I posted :smile:

"measured" just because it's derived from a measured value, (Only
to distinguish it from the exact value )

Regards, Hans
 
  • #22
marcus said:
so when did you first see this?
...

I mean, when did you first discover this numerical relation?
Have you known for weeks, for months? Or did you just
notice this a day or two before posting it?

I think it must have been a strange experience
so I am curious about what it was like
 
  • #23
marcus said:
Mohammeds Berufung


Da aber als in sein Versteck der Hohe,
sofort Erkennbare: der Engel, trat,
aufrecht, der lautere und lichterlohe:
da tat er allen Anspruch ab und bat
bleiben zu dürfen der von seinen Reisen
innen verwirrte Kaufmann, der er war;
er hatte nie gelesen - und nun gar
ein solches Wort, zu viel für einen Weisen.


Der Engel aber, herrisch, wies und wies
ihm, was geschrieben stand auf seinem Blatte,
und gab nicht nach und wollte wieder: Lies.
Da las er: so, dass sich der Engel bog.
Und war schon einer, der gelesen hatte
und konnte und gehorchte und vollzog.

Schön :smile:

Fun, isn't it? At least it might give an entry from another
direction to reveal something of the underlaying
physics (or geometry)

Regards, Hans
 
  • #24
marcus said:
I mean, when did you first discover this numerical relation?
Have you known for weeks, for months? Or did you just
notice this a day or two before posting it?

I think it must have been a strange experience
so I am curious about what it was like

I found it a week or two before posting. tried to see if it
could be further simplified but couldn't resist to post it
anymore. (Even though I'm the kind of person who will
never feel 100% sure about anything :shy: ) :smile:

Regards, Hans
 
  • #25
Hans de Vries said:
Fun, isn't it?

I do not know what to say.

if it is a coincidence then
it is the most decimal places coincidence I have
seen in my lifetime

I wish some of the others would say something
 
  • #26
Hans de Vries said:
I found it a week or two before posting. tried to see if it
could be further simplified but couldn't resist to post it
anymore...

well I am glad you posted it here
where we can see and discuss some

I suppose the next thing is two things:

1.write email to some physicists
(I would think immediately to write Lee Smolin because
it could have some connection with his CNS scheme for
iteratively generating the fundamental dimensionless constants)

2. prepare an article to post on http://arxiv.org

Alejandro knows about arXiv, has some experience.
Once it is on arXiv then it will always come up when people do
keyword searches. Then it may be of use to someone who
finds it by accident and is building a theory to explain alpha.

I think anyone here would be glad to help. It is quite interesting
that a coincidence (let us call it that) should go out 10 decimal places
 
  • #27
marcus said:
2. prepare an article to post on http://arxiv.org
Alejandro knows about arXiv, has some experience. Once it is on arXiv then it will always come up when people do keyword searches. Then it may be of use to someone who finds it by accident and is building a theory to explain alpha.

Yep, I know from the ArXiV :frown: , and I can see it is not easy to fit there, as the goal of the preprint distributions is to keep researchers up-to-date about advancements in *their* area. It is clearly not a hep-th/ , as it does not have a theory under, and probably not a math-ph/ . It could be focused as sort of "state-of-art memotecnics" or something in a line able to fit as physics/ (think about the American Journal of Physics kind of articles).
 
  • #28
I found an interesting one:

The idea is to see if Nature's limitation to three gene-
rations might have some relation with the identity:

[tex]3^2 + 4^2 = 5^2[/tex]

For the three consecutive integers 3,4 and 5, leading
to only 3 states rather than a whole series. We write
for the three lepton masses:
.
.

[tex]3^2 \ ln(m_e) \ \ \ + \ \ \ (4^2+n)\ ln(m_\tau) \ \ \ = \ \ \ (5^2+n)\ ln(m_\mu) [/tex]
.
.


We then look at the value of n. We do find [itex] n \approx 1.00086[/itex]
using the following Codata values for the mass ratio’s:

__3477.48 ____ (57)__ tau/electron
___206.7682838 (54)__ muon/electron
____16.8183 ___(27)__ tau/muon


The least well known value, [tex]ln(m_\tau)[/tex] has to be
exact to within 0.005% to get a result so close to
1.0000. This is less than the current experimental
uncertainty which means that the exact value of
n=1.0000 is still within the experimental uncertainty.

Regards, Hans
.
.
.

PS. Please be aware that the chance for coincidences
might be bigger than you think!


PPS: The formula is invariant under the transformation
[tex]\{ m_e, m_\mu, m_\tau \} \rightarrow \{ xm^y_e, \ xm^y_\mu, \ xm^y_\tau \}[/tex]
where x and y
are arbitrary numbers.
 
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  • #29
Actually there are two "pythagorean sequences", the other one is (-1,0,1), having as square the 1,0,1 sequence. Intriguingly, in your combination there is a twist, because the -1 is not going along with the 3, but with the 4.

Hans de Vries said:
PS. Please be aware that the chance for coincidences
might be bigger than you think!
I can see your conflict; your first set of formulae and this third one have different assignations for the quotient of logarithms,
[tex]{\ln m_\mu/m_\tau \over \ln m_e/m_\mu}={\pi^2-1 \over 2\pi^2-3}; \,
{\ln m_\mu/m_\tau \over \ln m_e/m_\mu}={3^2\over 4^2+1}[/tex]
so surely at least one if them is a random coincidence.
(EDITED: Or, perhaps, there is some happy circunstance where an expression happens during some series expansion of the another.
(EDITED again: in fact, using the expansion [tex]\pi^2/6=\zeta (2)=\sum_n 1/n^2[/tex], its first term is [tex]10/18[/tex], ie [tex]9+1 \over 17+1[/tex] so both expresions are no so far away: the second formula can be seen, at least, as the first term of the expansion of [tex]{\pi^2-1-1/2 \over 2\pi^2-3-1/2}[/tex]. Good enough if one takes into account that both HdV formulae are approximate guesses of an hypothetical exact formula.
Said this, both relations have an intense geometrical flavour. We are exploring two avenues of discretization of mechanics which could, in the long run, provide some justification: either to parametrise the ambiguity in taking two derivatives of the position to get Newton law, or to parametrise the ambiguity in the two sequencial derivatives of Lie Bracket.
 
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  • #30
spinors?

Perhaps it is physics after all; I have just revised (ah, google!) a point that I should have noticed instantaneously: that the Pythagorean condition appears naturally in the definition of Cayley spinors. A guy called Andrzej Trautman has worked out the diophantine case SL(2,Z). If interested in this line, check http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/week196.html and references therein.
 
  • #31
Alejandro,

I'm trying to go back to more physics but first this. The two
lepton ratio formula's may also be combined into the following:

[tex]\ln {m_\tau \over m_\mu} = {\pi-{1 \over \pi}}[/tex]_______ [tex]\ln {m_\mu \over m_e} = {4^2+1 \over 3^2} (\pi-{1 \over \pi})[/tex]_______[tex]\ln {m_\tau \over m_e} = {5^2+1 \over 3^2} (\pi-{1 \over \pi})[/tex]


Now if and only if the term [itex]\pi-1/\pi[/itex] was exact then all three
formulae would be within experimental range. Now it isn't but the
[itex]\pi-1/\pi[/itex] term is the only thing that I could connect to some real
physics up to now. It's inspired on the way how you rewrote:


[tex]\ln {m_\tau \over m_\mu} = {\pi-{1 \over \pi}}\ \ \ \ \ \ \equiv \ \ \ \ \ \ \ln {m_\tau \over m_\mu} = 2\sinh(\ln \pi)\ \ \ \ \ \ \equiv \ \ \ \ \ \ {m_\tau \over m_\mu} = |\exp( \sinh(\ln\pi) )|^2[/tex]


the sinh() gives us something in the space-time domain or in
momentum space if we consider it to be a boost like in:

[tex]\sinh \xi=\frac{ v/c}{\sqrt{1-v^2/c^2}}[/tex]____[tex]\cosh \xi=\frac{1}{\sqrt{1-v^2/c^2}}[/tex]
with:

[tex]\tanh \xi=v/c[/tex] ____[tex]\exp \xi=Doppler Ratio[/tex]

The Doppler Ratio now becomes [itex]\pi[/itex] interestingly enough (for
blueshift) and [itex]1/\pi[/itex] (for redshift) corresponding with a speed
v/c (of rotation?) The term [itex]\pi-1/\pi[/itex] could for instance
correspond with the imbalance in momentum change when
absorbing a photon from the back and a photon from the front.

The term [itex]|\exp( )|^2[/itex] may possibly be associated with going from
phase space (defined in x and ct) to probability space. if the
masses were to be defined as "mass density probabilities"
(mass * wave function) then the imaginary part of the
argument would define phase while the real part would
lead to the mass ratio at each point of the wave function.

Another, although numerological, reason to become interested
in this approach is that the most exact equations I got up to
now are found in the "boost domain", that is:

[tex]\ln {m_\mu \over m_e} \ = \ 2\sinh(a) * 1.000000093 , [/tex]____[tex]\ln {m_\tau \over m_\mu} \ = \ 2\sinh(b) * 1.0000047[/tex]

with:

[tex]a = 1 +\sqrt{1/2} \ \ \ and \ \ \ ab^2 = \sqrt 5[/tex]

I don't know if a and b are really a pair but at least there is a
simple relationship.

That's the best I can do for sofar in the hope to get some
physical meaning out of it.

Regards. Hans
 
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  • #32
Yep, I intended a connection with relativity when casting sinh here, but I am still far to understand how it goes. There is some dinamical analogy between the tetrad of elementary particles, [tex]\nu, e, u, d[/tex] and the tetrad of relativistic coordinates [tex]t, \rho, \theta, \phi[/tex]. On one side quarks are unobservable, so they feel very much an angular coordinate -which lacks of metric scale-. On another neutrinos are sort of special, so they feel as the trivial time coordinate. But we are very far from getting real meaning of this analogy; my own research program is in the backburner fire already for more than five years (see hep-th/9804169 and "cited by" there) with no remarkable milestones.

Hans, are you using some symbolic algebra program to search for your equations? I ask because even if the results are not publishable as a physics article, it could then to be a very valid article for computational journals.
 
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  • #33
arivero said:
TL attributes the second one to Lubos, but I have read it attributed to Feynman himself, just as an example of the kind we are discussing, random relationships. It could be interesting to know the origin of the first one to alpha, as it is a variant of HdV idea.

Let me to update on this. While Lubos Motl seems to have proposed the 6 pi^5 equation in an independent way, some previous postings in the net give it as folklorical knowledge, sometimes related to a couple of footnote-quoted papers by Armand Wiler:
Wyler,A., 'On the Conformal Groups in the Theory of Relativity and their Unitary Representations', Arch. Rat. Mech. and Anal.,31:35-50, 1968
Wyler,A., L'espace symetrique du groupe des equations de Maxwell' C. R. Acad. Sc. Paris,269:743 745
Wyler,A., 'Les groupes des potentiels de Coulomb et de ¥ukava', C..R. Acad. Sc. Paris,271:186 188
According F. D. T. Smith, this work of Wyler was noted in the Physics Today Aug and Sept 1971 (vol 24, pg 17-19 according M. Ibison).

Regretly old comptes rendues are not in the internet so I can not verify these papers. The Physics Today comment attracted some discussion in the Physical Review Letters,
http://prola.aps.org/abstract/PRL/v27/i22/p1545_1
http://prola.aps.org/abstract/PRL/v28/i7/p462_1
http://prola.aps.org/abstract/PRD/v15/i12/p3727_1
And well, there they refer to a "Wyler equation for alpha",
[tex]\alpha=(9/8 \pi^4)(\pi^5/2^4 5!)^{1/4}=1/137.03608[/tex]
not to an equation for proton mass. So we are still in doubt about the priority of the proton/electron quotient.

PS: please do not believe the Journal-Ref of Tony Smith, he is always exchanging trickeries with the arxiv (and please do not comment about it in this thread!). But Tony is always a good starting point to remember exotic, sometimes forgotten, research.
 
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  • #34
Trautman

arivero said:
Perhaps it is physics after all; I have just revised (ah, google!) a point that I should have noticed instantaneously: that the Pythagorean condition appears naturally in the definition of Cayley spinors. A guy called Andrzej Trautman has worked out the diophantine case SL(2,Z). If interested in this line, check http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/week196.html and references therein.

By the way, Trautman (I guess it's the same guy) considered
applying categories to gravity a long time ago. He presented
an article on it at Dirac's 70th birthday party.

The HdV work is cool. I'm tired of arguing with a string
phenomenologist that I know, who believes that it's in
principle impossible to calculate (from a fundamental theory)
the mass ratios.

Cheers
Kea
:smile:
 
  • #35
I found finally the Mp/Me=6 pi^5 estimate. It appears in the Physical Review,

Friedrich Lenz "The Ratio of Proton and Electron Masses" http://prola.aps.org/abstract/PR/v82/i4/p554_2
so neither Motl nor Feynman.

http://crd.lbl.gov/~dhbailey/dhbpapers/newrel.pdf adscribe it to http://www.stat.org.vt.edu/holtzman/IJGood/CV_IJG.pdf [Broken], "On the masses of Proton, Neutron and Hyperons", Journal of the Royal Naval Science Service, v 12, p 82-83 (1957), an article which is not included in the standard biblography of this author. But it is true that Good worked on this topic and published some comments about it. The bibliography gives
Some numerology concerning the elementary particles or things, JRNSS 15 (1960) 213
The Scientists Speculates: An Anthology of Partly-Baked Ideas (London, 1962)
The proton and neutron masses and a conjecture for the gravitational constant. Phys Lett A 33, 6 (1970) p 383-384

As it happens, Gustavo R. Gonzalez-Martin, who wrote me earlier this year (and I ignored him), gives all the correct references. I believe he uses a volume quotient very in the spirit of Wyler, so it is not strange he has done the right research of earlier work.

Note finally a funny coincidence: both De Vries and F. Lenz got his names as a famous heritage, of older scientists. But note that while HdV seems to exist in the network today, F. Lenz did not published anything in the Phys Rev except for that three-lines letter (hmm, it seems there is a contemporary F. Lenz publishing in the Z. Naturforsch.)
 
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