Does Einstein's General Relativity need to be adjusted for the Higgs field?

In summary, the conversation discusses the potential need to adjust Einstein's General Relativity to account for the Higgs field and how the highly curved nature of GR may also apply to the Higgs field. It also touches on the issue of particles acquiring mass and the role of the Higgs field in this process. Additionally, the conversation delves into the complexity of coupling quantum mechanics and general relativity and the potential implications for understanding the Higgs field.
  • #1
bananan
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Does Einstein's General Relativity need to be adjusted for the Higgs field?

Since the Higgs field gives most particles mass, and permeates all space, then GR needs the higgs field to be a theory of space?

So where GR is highly curved, the higgs field is also curved? And does a highly curved higgs field affect the way particles acquire mass? For that matter, a curved spacetime would also curve electricmagnetic field?
 
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  • #2
bananan said:
Does Einstein's General Relativity need to be adjusted for the Higgs field?

Since the Higgs field gives most particles mass, and permeates all space, then GR needs the higgs field to be a theory of space?

So where GR is highly curved, the higgs field is also curved? And does a highly curved higgs field affect the way particles acquire mass? For that matter, a curved spacetime would also curve electricmagnetic field?


Others may know more than I, but I am not aware of anybody theorizing on this precise issue. Higgs of course has not been seen or ruled out by experiment, but we should have at least preliminary news on that within a year, from Fermilab perhaps or if not, then from LHC.

Note that most baryonic mass comes, not from Higgs, but from the interaction energy of the gluon fields in the proton ans neutron (I believe the figure is about 95%). Higgs is (thought to be) responsible for the masses of the quarks, but those are just a minor component of total baryonic mass. And of course no-one really knows what the source of non-baryonic mass (aka dark matter) is.

Nevertheless, your question is a good one, and people hoping to couple matter to their quantum theories of gravity would do well to consider the issue.
 
  • #3
bananan said:
So where GR is highly curved, the higgs field is also curved? And does a highly curved higgs field affect the way particles acquire mass? For that matter, a curved spacetime would also curve electricmagnetic field?

Fields don't really get curved in the sense that spacetime is curved. Currently, there is no satisfactory/universally agreed way to consider quantum fields (i.e. the Higgs field, Dirac field etc.) on a fully independent (i.e. dynamic) background spacetime. People have done things like considered quantum fields on flat spacetimes + a little non-flat bit, and some are considering "just" a fully quantized independent background spacetime, and some are doing things in between.

But the short answer is, as far as I know, there is no satisfactory model that combines QM + GR so those questions will be difficult to answer.
 
  • #4
As far as I know, GR would predict that the Higgs field coupled to gravity through its stress-energy tensor, the same as any other field. (This is not an area where I know as much as I'd like, but I don't see any reason it shoould be different for the Higgs than for any other field, at least according to classical GR.)

But we don't know enough about the Higgs field to write down a stress-energy tensor for it.
 
  • #5
I would like bringing back this thread.

First off, could someone explain what the Higgs field idea explains what general relativity does not?

( I believe it is why and how matter gets mass assigned, if that is so then I do not understand why gets so little mentioning in the GR books ( can not find it Carroll), since that appears to be pretty central for a theory of gravity.)
 
  • #6
Another question: Higgs field comes into play when things are accelerated, it explains the resistance felt when acceleration takes place, acceleration caused by non- gravitational forces. right or not?

thanks
 
  • #7
Ratzinger said:
right or not?
No. The scalar Higgs field is central to the standard model of particle physics, in its currently accepted minimal version. This extremely successful theory relies heavily on the gauge principle, which very basically tells that not only the absolute phase of the wavefunction is not observable, but the phase can be shifted with a space-time dependent function, same shift for everybody, leading to no observable result. It is very neat as a principle and very efficient to predict the interaction terms in the lagrangian. But it requires all fields to be massless. The postulated Higgs field allows fundamental fields to get a massive-like term in the lagragian, the mass being simply proportional to the strength of interaction with the Higgs field.

GR does not address any other interaction than gravity. Electromagnetism and nuclear forces are all hidden in the energy-momentum tensor, particle content of the universe.

GR and Higgs field are two a priori very remotely connected physical theories, if at all. It might very well be that the Higgs is not fundamental, but a bound state, or condensate of something else. As SA mentionned, the concept of mass may be fundamental for both of them, but most of the mass of the universe we do not understand anyway (even ordinary mass around us, stored in the glue field, we don't know how to calculate). Linking Higgs and GR would require enormous advances of our understanding of Nature.
 
  • #8
great post, humanino! many thanks
 

1. What is Einstein's General Relativity?

Einstein's General Relativity is a theory of gravity that describes the relationship between space, time, and matter. It explains how massive objects like planets and stars interact with each other and how their motion is affected by the curvature of space and time.

2. What is the Higgs field?

The Higgs field is a theoretical field that permeates the entire universe and gives particles their mass. It was proposed by physicist Peter Higgs in the 1960s and was later confirmed by experiments at the Large Hadron Collider in 2012.

3. Does the Higgs field have an impact on Einstein's General Relativity?

Yes, the Higgs field does have an impact on Einstein's General Relativity. According to the theory, the Higgs field causes particles with mass to interact with the fabric of space-time, which in turn affects the curvature of space and time. This means that the presence of the Higgs field can affect the way gravity works.

4. Does Einstein's General Relativity need to be adjusted for the Higgs field?

Currently, there is no evidence to suggest that Einstein's General Relativity needs to be adjusted for the Higgs field. The theory has been extensively tested and has been found to accurately predict the behavior of gravity in a variety of situations. However, some scientists continue to research and explore the potential influence of the Higgs field on gravity.

5. Are there any other theories that incorporate both Einstein's General Relativity and the Higgs field?

Yes, there are theories that attempt to combine Einstein's General Relativity with the Higgs field, such as the Standard Model Extension and the Higgs Inflation model. However, these theories are still being tested and are not yet widely accepted by the scientific community.

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