Spherical electric field of electron.

In summary: No, an electron can have up to quadrapole moments. However, the limit to the number of possible form factors is not quite as severe as you might think.
  • #1
skybobster
2
0
On May 25, 2011, the journal Nature published an article stating that the electron was experimentally found to be extremely spherical. In Volume II, Chapter 5 of Feynman's Lectures on Physics, he states that the electric field of an electron has been experimentally determined to vary significantly from 1/r^2 as one approaches the center, where the field is singular. He gives no reference for this remark. Does anyone know of experimental results which have determined the electric field (or potential) as a function of the radial distance r for an electron (assuming spherical symmetry as a first approximation)?
 
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  • #2
The experiment you mention is very important, and it's unfortunate that the popular accounts of it make it sound so trivial, that the electron is "very round."

What they did was to attempt to measure the electron's electric dipole moment. A nonzero electric dipole moment would violate CP invariance. In the standard model, the electron does have an electric dipole moment but it is extremely small, about 10-42 e-cm. Most alternative models including supersymmetry and technicolor predict a much larger moment, around 10-29 e-cm.

The present experiment failed to find a moment but pushed the limit down to 10-28 e-cm, almost to the point where some of the leading theories would be eliminated.
 
  • #3
Is the electron's electric dipole moment aligned with its spin direction (like the magnetic moment)?

If not, then to fundamentally specify an electron, do you have to specify its momentum, electric dipole moment direction, and spin, respectively:

[tex]\psi=\psi_+(p,\theta_{e-d},\phi_{e-d})|+>+\psi_-(p,\theta_{e-d},\phi_{e-d})|-> [/tex]
Also, can an electron have quadrapole moments? Isn't there a limit to the number of possible form factors (since there are a finite combination of gamma matrices), so eventually the electron can't keep on having new features such as extra moments?
 

What is a spherical electric field?

A spherical electric field is a type of electric field that is created by a point charge, such as an electron. It is a three-dimensional field that extends outwards in all directions from the charge.

What is the significance of the spherical shape of an electric field produced by an electron?

The spherical shape of an electric field produced by an electron is significant because it shows that the strength of the field decreases as the distance from the electron increases. This is known as the inverse square law, which states that the strength of an electric field is inversely proportional to the square of the distance from the source charge.

How is the strength of a spherical electric field determined?

The strength of a spherical electric field is determined by the magnitude of the point charge that is producing the field. The larger the charge, the stronger the electric field will be at a given distance from the charge.

Can the shape of an electric field change?

Yes, the shape of an electric field can change depending on the arrangement of charges in the surrounding space. For example, if there are multiple point charges present, the electric field will be a combination of the individual fields produced by each charge.

How is the direction of a spherical electric field determined?

The direction of a spherical electric field is determined by the direction in which a positive test charge would move if placed in the field. It will always be directed away from a positive charge and towards a negative charge.

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