kurious
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If the Higgs theory is correct shouldn't it be able to predict the rest masses of all particles?
kurious said:If the Higgs theory is correct shouldn't it be able to predict the rest masses of all particles?
What do you mean ? The coupling constants are parameters of the theory used to calculate probabilites (amplitudes). The coupling might evolve with the energy scale. But they are not probabilitieskurious said:Coupling constants are usually associated with probabilities.
kurious said:Since the rest mass of one particle can be equivalent in magnitude to the mass of another faster moving particle which has a smaller rest mass,
can't the coupling constants be related to one particle moving at different speeds?
humanino said:Are you absolutely positive on that Marlon ?
If you look at the evolution of parton densities in the nucleon (DGLAP & ERBL) you should notive that at higher Q^2 the densities increase at small x_{Bjorken} = \frac{Q^2}{2 M \nu}.
The asymptotic freedom says that the coupling goes to zero with Q^2 increasing, not the speed. The coupling constant goes to zero when the quarks are close to each other, or at higher energies. But I am not certain (I have not heard about) relative speed interpretation.
At higher Q^2, one probes the structure at smaller distances at observes more and more parton pair fluctuations, which are located at smaller and smaller x_{Bjorken} which is the fraction of momentum carried by the parton. As far as I understand, if the fraction of momentum is smaller, the speed is smaller too. I am not too sure about this. The problem is, their is no satisfying way of defining the mass of the quarks which should depend on Q^2 too. So talking about relative speed, I am not too sure.