What Happened to Wheeler's Single Electron Idea?

In summary: Thanks for providing the links.In summary, the idea is that there is only one electron that exists and that it is the same everywhere. It is not clear how this fits in with the idea of causality.
  • #1
ktx49
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1
What Happened to Wheeler's "Single Electron" Idea?

Hello,

I wrote out a lengthy reply that I could not retrieve after I pressed preview and was asked to log in again...not sure if that's a bug/glitch as I am brand new on this website, but it was very annoying ;)

Anyways before I introduce my topic I'd like to tell you guys that I have almost no formal background in physics or mathematics...I've used the power of the internet to educate myself as much as possible in modern physics etc so bear with me.

I just recently heard of the story involving Richard Feynman and his then professor John Wheeler back in 1940 in which Wheeler calls Feynman on the telephone at some absurd hour of the night and exclaims that "he finally knows why all electrons have the exact same charge and the exact same mass"!

If I'm understanding this correctly, he goes on to say that the reason electrons are all perfectly identical is because they are actually just one, single particle moving back and forth through spacetime in a single continuous and connecting world line. The appearance of many identical but separate electrons that we see/experience in our everyday universe is kind of an illusion created by our fixed, sliced view of time. However Wheeler says its really just the exact same particle which has traveled back and forth many times through that particular slice of time. From this idea, he went on to say that the electrons charge is simply its direction in time; so that a positron was really just this very same particle(electron) moving "backwards" in time.

Feynman quickly realized the numerous holes in this "theory" but ironically would run with the latter part of Wheeler's idea on his way to winning the Nobel Prize.
Apparently the lack of equal amounts of antiparticles and particles in our visible universe is the quickest and easiest way to dismiss this idea but we also hear a lot about broken symmetries and things that could explain this.
Basically I'm very interested in finding out what became of Wheeler's idea or theory as physics and our knowledge has progressed...

I personally see some very deep connections and implications if you follow this line of thinking and I just figure there had to be other, much smarter people who took this idea seriously.
discuss...

Thanks!
 
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  • #2


Hello ktx49, I am also new. I'm not familiar with this story, but look forward to hearing responses from others.
 
  • #3


It's an interesting idea but it's not clear how it fits in with the idea of causality. What happens if an electron falls in a black hole?
 
  • #4


Khashishi said:
It's an interesting idea but it's not clear how it fits in with the idea of causality. What happens if an electron falls in a black hole?

i understand your point...but I would immediately point to well established/tested theories such as QMs...where we clearly see these same "issues" with causality(think delayed choice experiment).

anyways thanks for reply, i'd love more discussion on this topic
 
  • #6


Bobbywhy said:
ktx49, Welcome to Physics Forums!

Surely you have already seen these, but for others, here are some websites discussing this idea:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/One-electron_universe
http://cheatingtheferryman.blogspot.com/2007/10/feynmans-one-electron-universe-theory.html
https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=16594&page=2

hello! i have just recently begun my physics journey and will definitely take a look at the links you've provided before continuing...thanks for the reply!
 
  • #7


after quickly reading through the 3 links provided above, its rather clear that almost nobody who commented on the topic even had a proper grasp of what the hypothesis is saying...not sure if that is a good or bad thing lol

for example, there was a lot of debate on the very premises of the hypothesis!
eg. what "identical" electrons/particles even mean...

It seems to me that many of the people who commented think the identical properties seen are what define an electron, and that if a particle didnt have these identical characteristics, than it wouldn't be an electron, duh.
so therefore: identical electrons =/= one electron

now maybe my understanding is wrong and maybe the author of this article found here(http://io9.com/5876966/what-if-every-electron-in-the-universe-was-all-the-same-exact-particle) is also wrong. ignoring those very real possibilities, I find it almost inconceivable that Wheeler and Feynman both could be wrong in their understanding of what "identical" means as explained further here:
The Indistinguishable Problem
Like so much of the quantum world, electrons are strange. What's worse, they're all strange in exactly the same way. Every electron is identical to every other electron. They all have the same mass, the same electric charge, and the same spin. (For more on what these terms mean, check out our field guides here and here.) Electrons are just one of the indistinguishable particles - other examples include photons, neutrinos, protons, neutrons, and indeed most of the subatomic particles.

This isn't a trivial point, either. Not only is it impossible to tell electrons apart based on their physical properties, it's essentially impossible to tell them apart at all. This is because determining specific electrons by their position would require measuring their trajectories with exact precision, and the laws of quantum mechanics forbid this. Between measurements, electrons in the quantum world are probabilistic, defined by wave functions that give the odds of finding that particle in any given position. When the wave functions of multiple electrons overlap, it becomes officially impossible to determine which of the electrons was the one that was originally measured.

This is all well-established quantum theory, backed up by nearly a century of experimental work. But it doesn't answer the deeper question - why are all the electrons identical? They most assuredly are, but there's no actual reason why they should be. For many scientists, a question like this traipses over into philosophy, at least at current level of knowledge. As far as most of physics is concerned, indistinguishable particles are indistinguishable simply because that's the way the universe is. No further explanation can be advanced, and so far one hasn't really been needed.
http://io9.com/5876966/what-if-every-electron-in-the-universe-was-all-the-same-exact-particle

so let's start from the beginning then where it seems most people get hung up on this idea...

is there any evidence to support the view of many electrons/particles?? is there any test or experiments that have been performed which can prove 100% without a doubt the existence of at the very least, more than 1 electron?

thanks
 
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  • #8


Evidence that more than one electron exists:

Two CRT TVs are in operation on opposite sides of the earth.

If "normal" matter is composed of normal atoms, and normal atoms have electrons in orbit around their nucleii, then there must be more than one electron in our universe because matter is distributed homogeneously.
 
  • #9


Q: What Happened to Wheeler's "Single Electron" Idea?

A: I would say it is not considered relevant in the context of the currently accepted quantum field theory (an example of which is QED, in which final stages of development his student, Feynman, played a significant role) for two reasons:
  1. A particle may follow any world line (see Path Integral Formulation of Quantum Mechanics);
  2. Particles are considered to be excitations of a quantum matter field that propagate through space-time carrying energy-momentum. This immediately explains why they are identical and indistinguishable.
 
  • #10


not sure I'm following either of you guys...sorry

i do have a somewhat related question.

can anything besides particles and their anti-particle counterparts become entangled??

thanks
 
  • #11


ktx49 said:
not sure I'm following either of you guys...sorry

i do have a somewhat related question.

can anything besides particles and their anti-particle counterparts become entangled??

thanks

What prompted you to ask this question now? You are the first person who had used the term 'entangled' in this thread, and it is in the quoted post.
 
  • #12


ktx49 said:
after quickly reading through the 3 links provided above, its rather clear that almost nobody who commented on the topic even had a proper grasp of what the hypothesis is saying

I can hardly believe my eyes. You've said that you're a beginner, and your response to people who have answered your questions - some of whom have earned doctorates in the field - is that clearly they don't understand...but you do.

The answer is twofold: we have a different explanation that has more predictive power, and that this model predicts symmetry relations in nature that are not observed. It's neither correct nor useful, so people don't worry about it anymore.
 
  • #13


Dickfore said:
What prompted you to ask this question now? You are the first person who had used the term 'entangled' in this thread, and it is in the quoted post.

i'm a little confused by this post...to clarify, you're asking me why I just now decided to bring up the topic of entanglement?? also, what do you mean by the "quoted post"?

thanks, and sorry for confusion ;)
 
  • #14


ktx49 said:
to clarify, you're asking me why I just now decided to bring up the topic of entanglement??

yes.
 
  • #15


ktx49 said:
If I'm understanding this correctly, he goes on to say that the reason electrons are all perfectly identical is because they are actually just one, single particle moving back and forth through spacetime in a single continuous and connecting world line. The appearance of many identical but separate electrons that we see/experience in our everyday universe is kind of an illusion created by our fixed, sliced view of time.

If the "yarn ball" world-line of a single electron is uncut, it must have a point with a highest and a lowest temporal coordinate. That means, if we take a slice at times before the lowest temporal coordinate, or after the highest one, there would be no electrons present.

Also, how is electron-positron annihilation described within this hypothesis?

So, since you mention that even Feynman himself found a lot of holes in it, let me link you to a video:
http://youtu.be/b240PGCMwV0?t=39s
 
  • #16


Vanadium 50 said:
I can hardly believe my eyes. You've said that you're a beginner, and your response to people who have answered your questions - some of whom have earned doctorates in the field - is that clearly they don't understand...but you do.

i think you misread what i wrote. i looked over the 3 links that were provided by 'Bobbywhy' at the beginning of the thread(presumably to give people a better idea of what I was attempting to discuss), and when I looked through the comments/discussion contained in these 3 sources, it was glaringly obvious that *most* of the people who replied or commented did not even understand the concept properly.

as is shown here with quotes directly from the 3 links provided:

this cannot be true, as if it were, when any atom lost an electron via the photoelectric effect, it would then have 0 electrons.
Theory of one electron! ... so if a positron finds this electron and aniihilates it, it would destroy the whole universe! isn't it?
the reason for that is because if they weren't identical, we would call them different things, like, for example, muons and taus
I don't know who suggested this idea, but I don't quite understand how it can be possbile. If there exists only one electron, how come an atom can have a
2e−
charge?

lol
as I clearly articulated in my 1st post on these forums, I have zero formal education in the areas of physics or advanced mathematics...but even I can see that people making these kind of statements(regardless if they are actually right or wrong) obviously do not understand the hypothesis of the one-electron universe.
now there are also some very good and informative comments sprinkled in from people who are obviously well versed in the subject but my point was that the discussion sucked because most people didnt properly grasps the ideas behind it. again, this is independent of whether the one-electron hypothesis is correct or even useful.
hopefully that clears up the misunderstanding; i would be foolish to act like I've got a better understanding of physics than even 1% of the members of this site. i came here to learn, not show people up.


Dickfore-
I think you've probably figured out where I was going with the entanglement question lol...BUT, to answer your question directly, I am very curious about the exact nature of entanglement because in my limited exploration of QMs, I've only seen the mention of a particle/anti-particle entanglements!
if this is true, it immediately slapped me in the face that a one-particle universe could probably explain this phenomenon quite easily(again this is in the spirit of discussion, regardless if its actually correct).

as far as highest/lowest temporal coordinate containing no electrons/particles...I think we would have to make too many assumptions about the nature of time in order to make a generalized statement like that. again, I am not versed in these areas but I do know that our understanding of time is pretty limited. Also, you are assuming that the "yarnball" world line is uncut, I'm pretty sure there would at least be a beginning point, where the first electron came into existence so If by uncut you mean a looped line that may be incorrect.

Electron-Positron annihilation is described pretty well by Vanadium50 himself in the previous thread that was linked above...ill quote him for you:
In this hypothesis, annihilation is the "turning around point", where an electron starts moving backwards in time and appears to us as a positron. Pair production is the same thing, although the hypothesis doesn't explain where that electron comes from - or why its the same as the earlier electron.
and i also liked this little nugget posted by DaveC426913:
Electron and positron moving forward in time and subsequently colliding.
- is equivalent to -
Electron moving forward in time, turning into a positron, which immediately begins moving backward in time.


sorry for such a massive post...i didnt want to spam my own thread so I kept editing this one.
thanks again for the replies and sharing your knowledge
 
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  • #17


I suspected that you drew a linguistic analogy between the intertwining of "yarn ball" and entanglement. If this is the case, then let me tell you that the concept of entanglement in Quantum Mechanics is of quite a different nature than the naive pictorial picture that would come to mind. I would advise you to not use concepts of Physics through their layman's linguistic interpretation (ex. weight, energy, work, pressure, and so on).
 
  • #18


Dickfore said:
I suspected that you drew a linguistic analogy between the intertwining of "yarn ball" and entanglement. If this is the case, then let me tell you that the concept of entanglement in Quantum Mechanics is of quite a different nature than the naive pictorial picture that would come to mind. I would advise you to not use concepts of Physics through their layman's linguistic interpretation (ex. weight, energy, work, pressure, and so on).

nope, go back a page and look over my last reply again, as it has been extensively edited...

but thanks for the help, I will definitely heed your advice in those regards ;)

as i hinted at in my last post, the one-electron universe could provide a possible explanation for the paradoxes and problems associated with Entanglement. just an observation from a noob ;) of course this logic would fall apart if entanglement can exist between anything besides a particle and its antiparticle counterpart

did my own searching, apparently things as large as buckyballs can become entangled but I'm not sure if that means the entire buckyballs are themselves entangled or just that there's particles within the atoms of the buckyballs that are entangled. not sure if it even matters
 
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  • #19


ktx49 said:
nope, go back a page and look over my last reply again, as it has been extensively edited...

ktx49 said:
Dickfore-
as far as highest/lowest temporal coordinate containing no electrons/particles...I think we would have to make too many assumptions about the nature of time in order to make a generalized statement like that. again, I am not versed in these areas but I do know that our understanding of time is pretty limited. Also, you are assuming that the "yarnball" world line is uncut, I'm pretty sure there would at least be a beginning point, where the first electron came into existence so If by uncut you mean a looped line that may be incorrect.

Electron-Positron annihilation is described pretty well by Vanadium50 himself in the previous thread that was linked above...ill quote him for you:

and i also liked this little nugget posted by DaveC426913:

By "uncut" i meant having either zero or two open ends. Assuming a continuous world line, and a continuous time (this is hardly a rigid assumption of the nature of time), there must be a max and a min. (Se http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extreme_value_theorem) This means that after that time, there would be no electrons and positrons anymore, i.e. they have all annihilated.

Annihilation might be nicely visualized as an electron turning back in time. However, I must remind you that, as an outcome of every (real) annihilation process there is a certain number greater than two of photons coming out. How do these fit in the picture?

Furthermore, an energetic enough photon (at least with energy of twice the rest energy of the electron, nearly 1.02 MeV) may produce an electron-positron pair. Again, how does this process fit in the picture?

Finally, think of the following. The first "yarn ball" reached its maximal temporal coordinate, leaving all electrons and positrons annihilated. Then, many of the resulting photons which came out as products of the annihilation process, kept on propagating at later times. Some of them produced other electron-positron pairs at an even higher temporal coordinate. These electrons must belong to a different "yarn ball" than the one that was continuous in the past. Thus, the concept of a single "yarn ball" gets destroyed.
 
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  • #20


Jesus. And I thought I had heard of most theories of physics.
Now comes this outlandish and disturbing theory of 1 electron universe.
Thank you ktx49, for bringing this theory to our attention.

If this theory is true, it would prove our (humans) perceived 'resolution of time' is very very poor. Just like how our lack of fast visual response is exploited in TV watching.

But how would anyone explain solid objects with this theory?
 
  • #21


im going to post a really crude diagram i made myself based on another I've seen before that I can't find right now...its not perfect but it might answer some of the questions Dickfore has raised. again this is for the spirit of discussion, I'm not trying to say this is correct or accurate or a complete theory or something, i just think its worth discussing more, that's all.

24wg3fm.jpg


in the diagram the reds(-) are electrons and the blues(+) are positrons.
 
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  • #22


Neandethal00 said:
Jesus. And I thought I had heard of most theories of physics.
Now comes this outlandish and disturbing theory of 1 electron universe.
Thank you ktx49, for bringing this theory to our attention.

If this theory is true, it would prove our (humans) perceived 'resolution of time' is very very poor. Just like how our lack of fast visual response is exploited in TV watching.

But how would anyone explain solid objects with this theory?

while i like your analogy about our perception of time/vision, I think its not a perfect analogy because its not an illusion or trick of our sensory systems!
in this case, the electron in this hypothesis is literally existing in multiple locations at once in a given "slice" of time as illustrated above. it appears to be many separate electrons to an observer and can interact with itself through atoms etc... even though its really just ONE single particle moving back and forth in time.

i guess if you think about it like time traveling it might help. if it was somehow possible for you to travel back and forth in time(ignoring paradoxes etc) and you went back in time and located a previous version of yourself to sit down and have a conversation...to an observer, it would appear to be a twin/clone/replica of some sort, but in reality they are one and the same.

make any more sense?
 
  • #23


I think we need to "get real" about this idea. I haven't seen any evidence that either Wheeler or Feynman or anyone else ever developed it beyond the level of speculation. Are there any papers (not telephone conversations or anecdotes in Nobel Prize lectures) that develop the "single electron theory" seriously?
 
  • #24


jtbell said:
I think we need to "get real" about this idea. I haven't seen any evidence that either Wheeler or Feynman or anyone else ever developed it beyond the level of speculation. Are there any papers (not telephone conversations or anecdotes in Nobel Prize lectures) that develop the "single electron theory" seriously?

this is precisely what I'm asking when I created this thread. it seems to me that Wheeler and Feynman are just way too smart to openly speculate about something like this without some serious thought behind it...

i've done some searching on my own to find out what happened to this idea and I'm having a hard time finding anything on it, period. its actually how I found this website ;)

i think a good starting point for any serious discussion, is whether a positron is truly an electron moving backwards in time or if that is just an inevitable interpretation arising from the math/models we use...
 
  • #25
ktx49 said:
im going to post a really crude diagram i made myself based on another I've seen before that I can't find right now...its not perfect but it might answer some of the questions Dickfore has raised. again this is for the spirit of discussion, I'm not trying to say this is correct or accurate or a complete theory or something, i just think its worth discussing more, that's all.

24wg3fm.jpg


in the diagram the reds(-) are electrons and the blues(+) are positrons.

What proces does the endpoint of this yarn ball correspond to? There is an electron propagating forward in time, and then it ends with nothing happening! This process had not been observed in Nature. In fact, it contradicts the law of conservation of electron lepton number, 4-momentum, and angular momentum.
 
  • #26


like i said...that's a really crude model of diagram i can't locate right now.

so unfortunately I couldn't even tell you what the "endpoints" correspond to. i probably messed up by placing electrons at the endpoints anyways, so let's ignore those for the time being and focus on the process in the middle since this is what we are discussing.

maybe refer me to a traditional illustration of an electron propagating forward in time??
 
  • #27


The question has been answered. Unfortunately, the OP seems not to accept that answer, but repeating things is unlikely to help. Also, people are starting to use PF-unacceptable sources - speculation by others - to make their points. So this thread is closed.
 

1. What is Wheeler's Single Electron Idea?

Wheeler's Single Electron Idea, proposed by physicist John Archibald Wheeler in 1947, is a theory that suggests that all electrons in the universe are actually just one single electron moving backwards and forwards in time.

2. Why is this theory important?

This theory has important implications for our understanding of time and the nature of reality. It challenges the notion of a linear, one-directional time and suggests that all particles are interconnected and can exist in multiple points in time simultaneously.

3. What happened to Wheeler's Single Electron Idea?

Despite its significance, Wheeler's Single Electron Idea has not gained widespread acceptance in the scientific community. It remains a controversial and unproven theory.

4. What evidence supports or refutes this theory?

There is currently no direct evidence to support or refute Wheeler's Single Electron Idea. Some physicists have proposed experiments to test its validity, but none have been conclusive.

5. How does Wheeler's Single Electron Idea relate to other theories in physics?

Wheeler's Single Electron Idea is often compared to other theories such as the Many-Worlds Interpretation and the Wheeler-DeWitt equation, which also challenge our understanding of time and reality. However, it remains a unique and controversial idea in the scientific community.

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