Are All Fundamental Particles Truly Pointlike?

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The discussion centers on the nature of fundamental particles and whether they can be considered truly point-like or if they possess dimensions. It argues that particles like electrons may not exist independently but only in relation to their fields and interactions, suggesting that the concept of a particle having spatial extent is meaningless. The conversation also touches on the implications of defining particles as point-like, emphasizing that zero volume is still a measurable concept, albeit one that may not correspond to empirical existence. Furthermore, the validity of theories like the Big Bang is debated, with some asserting that scientific understanding often relies on indirect evidence rather than direct observation. Ultimately, the dialogue highlights the complexities of defining existence and measurement in the context of quantum physics.
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Is there such a thing as a truly point particle, ie one with dimensions? Alternatively, is possible for there to be any fundamental particle which is not a point particle?
It seems to me that an "electron" for example does not exist beyond its electric field, mass (resistance to motion) and other similar properties. In turn the electric field does not exist beyond its influence on other particles (if only one charged particle existed, there would be no reason to assume the existence of an electric field). So the only existence an electron has is in its relation to other things. In this sense, an "electron" as such does not exist at all as a "particle" and the concept of it having spatial extent is meaningless. By applying this logic to other fundamental particles its seems to me that you can deduce that all fundamental particles must be "pointlike".
Sorry if this is all a bit jumbled and badly explained, and i hope i put it in the right forum.
 
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I'm just going to comment on one specific point:

If "the concept of it having spatial extent is meaningless" is a correct statement, it thereby follows that it's meaningless to say a particle is pointlike, because that's the same as saying that particle has a spatial extent of a point.
 
The particle is pointlike in that it occupies zero volume. It is also correct to say (eg for an electron) that the particle has a centre of mass and centre of charge located at a specific point in space. The idea is there is no inherent "particle" as such that exists beyond the collective properties of electric field etc, which could be said to occupy a volume.
 
But zero volume is still a volume. When you say something has zero volume, you are making the assertion that the concept of volume is applicable to that thing, and the measure of its volume is equal to zero. This is very different from the assertion that the concept of volume is inapplicable to that thing.

If you're going to take the position that there is only the quantum fields, then you're going to have to understand that those notions defined for classical particles simply do not apply. Once you understand that, then you'll have a better understanding of the new notions that we invent to talk about the quantum fields.

e.g. you know of one way to define the "position" of a field, by computing something like center of charge. (Not being well versed in QFT, I'm not sure if center of charge literally makes sense) This is a completely different notion than the classical idea of the position of a particle, although they share many similarities. Once you really understand that these are different ideas, you will have a better chance of understanding the "position" of a field.
 
Hurkyl said:
But zero volume is still a volume. When you say something has zero volume, you are making the assertion that the concept of volume is applicable to that thing, and the measure of its volume is equal to zero. This is very different from the assertion that the concept of volume is inapplicable to that thing.

It seems to me that it is impossible to measure something of zero volume. Hence, it does not empirically exist.

One might attempt to define or locate something as one dimension, but if it is actually there, it has three spatial dimensions.
 
sd01g said:
It seems to me that it is impossible to measure something of zero volume.
Why is that?
 
Hurkyl said:
Why is that?

Consider the following 'points'.

1) Volumn is a mathematical concept for How Much not What Is.

2) Zero volumn is the exact, empirical equivalent of absolute nothing.

3) One may state that something has zero volumn, but it is just a statement of faith, because it was not determined by any empirical measurements. There is no measuring device that can detect or measure the zero point on the number line.

4) Zero volumn and 'zero-dimension points' exist only in the mind/brain. They are very usefull mathematical concepts but in the external, real, empirical world, they do not exist.

Thanks
 
sd01g said:
Consider the following 'points'.

1) Volum[e] is a mathematical concept for How Much not What Is.
Sure. And so it would be rather peculiar that it would be possible to show something doesn't exist simply because its volume was equal to a certain number...

2) Zero volum[e] is the exact, empirical equivalent of absolute nothing.
Please elaborate; I cannot think of a way to read this sentence that simultaneously makes sense, supports your argument, and appears true.

3) One may state that something has zero volum[e], but it is just a statement of faith, because it was not determined by any empirical measurements. There is no measuring device that can detect or measure the zero point on the number line.
It takes no more faith than any other scientific statement.

4) Zero volum[e] and 'zero-dimension points' exist only in the mind/brain. They are very usefull mathematical concepts but in the external, real, empirical world, they do not exist.
The same could be said for every physical theory. In what relevant way does a volume of zero differ from a volume of 1 meter cubed, or any amount of mass or charge?
 
Maybe we are using different definitions of the word zero. My dictionary lists twenty different meanings/usages. I was wondering if you believe anything consisting of matter/energy can exist in only one or only two spatial dimentsions?

Also, do you consider the Big Bang Theory a proper theory even though it can never be verified by an actual observation?

Thanks
 
  • #10
sd01g said:
Maybe we are using different definitions of the word zero. My dictionary lists twenty different meanings/usages. I was wondering if you believe anything consisting of matter/energy can exist in only one or only two spatial dimentsions?

Also, do you consider the Big Bang Theory a proper theory even though it can never be verified by an actual observation?

Thanks

There's a huge misunderstanding of how science works in this post.

When something hits you on the back, do you also automatically dismiss where it might come from simply because you or no one else made an 'actual observation' where it came from?

Science works in 2 ways in such a case:

1. It rules out large region of "phase space" where it can say with high certainty that the object didn't come from. Since it hits you on your back, you can rule out that it came from the front, unless there was some really strange circumstances.

2. But more importantly, if you can make a detection of how hard the object hits you, and figure out roughly in what direction it hits you, you can make a very reasonable guess at where it possibly came from.

The same can be said about the Big Bang. We may not have observed it directly, but what we observe now (and in the past based on distant observations) can be used as evidence that all point to such a scenario. It is an insult to those who have work in Cosmology to simply dismiss it as being something that can never be verified simply because there's no "actual observation", whatever that means.

This discussion of "point particles" is also rather strange. Point particles in physics means that the spatial extent of the object has no detectable consequence. So if you care that much about "actual observation", this would be it. Our "actual observation" based on measurements from area of study such as condensed matter physics, gives a direct result that many of these particles are point particles. To say that they have a spatial extent does not match our "actual observation". We have no ability to say that these have any. Not only that, the theory that describes them as point particles produces the SAME prediction as experiment.

Lacking anything to the contrary, that's all we are able to verify. Claiming anything else would be something made on purely speculative grounds devoid of any experimental observations.

Zz.
 
  • #11
ZapperZ said:
.

The same can be said about the Big Bang. We may not have observed it directly, but what we observe now (and in the past based on distant observations) can be used as evidence that all point to such a scenario. It is an insult to those who have work in Cosmology to simply dismiss it as being something that can never be verified simply because there's no "actual observation", whatever that means.

The intent was not to insult but to try to understand exactly what kind of "theory" is the Big Bang and what is it's probability of correctness when it cannot be verified or recreated empirically, in real time, as required by the scientific method.

The notion of the Big Bang is based not on observation, but on a rational, backward projection. It also requires a very suspect notion of moving 'space' faster than the speed of light to account for current observations. Its seems that 'space' can not be observed or moved--only matter/energy can be observed moving in space. Moving space is an impossibility for science and a very difficult challenge for philosophy.

Also, very importantly, the philosophy department gives us more latitude to speculate than the physics department.

Thanks
 
  • #12
sd01g said:
The intent was not to insult but to try to understand exactly what kind of "theory" is the Big Bang and what is it's probability of correctness when it cannot be verified or recreated empirically, in real time, as required by the scientific method.

The notion of the Big Bang is based not on observation, but on a rational, backward projection. It also requires a very suspect notion of moving 'space' faster than the speed of light to account for current observations. Its seems that 'space' can not be observed or moved--only matter/energy can be observed moving in space. Moving space is an impossibility for science and a very difficult challenge for philosophy.

Again, you have not understood what the "scientific method" is. It has isn't restricted to your requirement. And you seem to have ignored the example I gave. Many of the things you are using now are based on our 'extrapolation' of where things are. Would you believe that the band structure calculations being used to describe the semiconductors you are using in your modern electronics (including your computer) is based on calculations done at ZERO KELVIN? For many materials, only at T=0 is the only place where we can actually obtain any kind of solution to know and infer its behavior. Yet, using your criteria, this isn't a 'scientific method', since we have never made any "actual observation" of T=0. For some odd reason, a logical inference isn't part of your standard vocabulary, whereas it certainly is a BIG part of the vocabulary of scientists and scientific methodology.

This isn't about the Big Bang theory. Rather, it is about your false impression of how science works. Your objection to how we arrive at the BB can be used against all aspects of physics. Yet, you have made full use of the advancements made in physics, and the fact that they WORK, means that such methodology is valid. Can you say the same with your methodology and criteria?

Also, very importantly, the philosophy department gives us more latitude to speculate than the physics department.

That's OK. I won't hold that against you.

Zz.
 
  • #13
sd01g said:
Maybe we are using different definitions of the word zero.
By 'zero', I mean the number that is one less than one.
 
  • #14
ZapperZ said:
Again, you have not understood what the "scientific method" is. It has isn't restricted to your requirement. And you seem to have ignored the example I gave. Many of the things you are using now are based on our 'extrapolation' of where things are. Would you believe that the band structure calculations being used to describe the semiconductors you are using in your modern electronics (including your computer) is based on calculations done at ZERO KELVIN? For many materials, only at T=0 is the only place where we can actually obtain any kind of solution to know and infer its behavior. Yet, using your criteria, this isn't a 'scientific method', since we have never made any "actual observation" of T=0. For some odd reason, a logical inference isn't part of your standard vocabulary, whereas it certainly is a BIG part of the vocabulary of scientists and scientific methodology.

A great example of the scientific method. The scientific method includes speculative hypotheses, projections, extrapolations, logical deductions/inferences and luck. But the scientific method is not completed--truth established--until it is verified & validated, in real time by an observer/experimenter or consumer. It requires that the 'chip', or the computer, work in the real world in real time and work every time it is challenged to do so.

The success/unsuccess of the empirical observation/experiment is what validates/invalidates all (or part) of that which went before.

The example of being hit in the back was not so good of an example if it is a one time event. The hypothesis and logical deduction/inference in steps one and two were only part of the sceintific method.
 
  • #15
sd01g said:
A great example of the scientific method. The scientific method includes speculative hypotheses, projections, extrapolations, logical deductions/inferences and luck. But the scientific method is not completed--truth established--until it is verified & validated, in real time by an observer/experimenter or consumer. It requires that the 'chip', or the computer, work in the real world in real time and work every time it is challenged to do so.

The success/unsuccess of the empirical observation/experiment is what validates/invalidates all (or part) of that which went before.

The example of being hit in the back was not so good of an example if it is a one time event. The hypothesis and logical deduction/inference in steps one and two were only part of the sceintific method.

But that is why we CONTINUE to make more observations to test the BB model!

By its nature, field of study such as cosmology would never have the same degree of certainty as condensed matter/material science. That is a given. However, that is no reason to dismiss it, because many of the models do not have JUST ONE observations to validate their existence. It is based on a series of different type of observations. In fact, experimental particle physics done in particle accelerators are also contributing to the validity of such models (check particle astrophysics).

All of these observations and the building of new observatories/telescopes are equivalent to doing experiments in cosmology. It IS part of the scientific method!

Zz.
 
  • #16
Hurkyl said:
Sure. And so it would be rather peculiar that it would be possible to show something doesn't exist simply because its volume was equal to a certain number...

That would be any number except zero. It is meaningless to state that something real has zero volume or zero area. Zero volume and zero area have never been observed or experienced. Why would anyone assume that anything real had zero volume?...maybe because the math is easier.
 
  • #17
sd01g said:
That would be any number except zero. It is meaningless to state that something real has zero volume or zero area. Zero volume and zero area have never been observed or experienced. Why would anyone assume that anything real had zero volume?...maybe because the math is easier.

You are forgetting one important thing here. Maybe when you get to such a scale, the concept of "length" or "space" no longer has any meaning. That can easily be argued that that is why assigning such things as "point" particles WORKED!

The problem here is that you continue to argue the physical nature of what we observe and understand of our universe based on what your "preference", rather than what has been shown to work, to be valid, or to have been consistent. It is extremely hard to dismiss that QED could agree with the experimental measurement of the electron gyromagnetic ratio to such a degree of accuracy. When a theory can match something that accurately, you simply cannot dismiss it with impunity. Yet, consider how QED treats such particles.

I think it is you who have to reconcile your insistence with the experimental and theoretical agreement here. It is you who need to come up with an explanation on why QED (and in fact, QCD as well) worked so well using such point particles.

Zz.
 
  • #18
sd01g said:
That would be any number except zero.
How convenient.


It is meaningless to state that something real has zero volume or zero area.
The volume of an object is real number value, correct?
Zero is a real number, correct?
= is defined for any pair of real numbers, correct?
Therefore, the statement that the volume of an object is zero has meaning.

I suspect, however, that you intended to say something other than "lack of meaning".


Zero volume and zero area have never been observed or experienced.
Sure it has.


Why would anyone assume that anything real had zero volume?
Because it's consistent with empirical data, and required by our theoretical knowledge?
 
  • #19
Zero is a very special number. It is the only number that has no magnitude. It is the only number that is precluded from being a denominator in a fraction. Every number's value (except zero) is represented by a distance from the zero point on the number line to the point of that given number. Zero Volume has no magnitude. It is nothing real and contains nothing real.

However, zero volume and zero dimension points are useful mathematical concepts that can be applied to very small-- but not quite zero--volumes and very small-- but not quite zero--dimension points. These concepts can describe how real things move, predict future location, describe how much and how many...but for something to really be there, it must exist with three spatial dimensions.

For those who think that 'the math' is the really real, please disregard the above.

Thanks
 
  • #20
We need a foundation

There is no such thing as a point particle. All elementary particles have spin which infers that they have some sort of internal structure. Point particles is a construct created by Coulombs electrostatic treatment of electric forces between charged particles.

Second, be carefull the way you throw 'fundamental particles' around conceptually. For instance, the proton, neutron and electron are all suppose to be elementary particles, which is interesting because we know that the neutron can decay, so what makes it elementary? The photon is considered to be elementary in the stricktest sense, even though it can form through the annihilation of an electron with a positron, and it can decay into each respectively.

Next, if you are having a hard time appreciating what a particle is, what it is composed of an where its boundary is, for example, individual electrons shot through a two slit barrier produce an interference pattern, so how does the electron interfere with itself-some suggest that it passes through both holes simultaneously...

The answer is clear, that there is no foundation for your intellect to group, organize, and arrange these concepts. The idea of a fundamental particle is particularly interesting because it suggests that below all of the particles is a fundamental particle, a building block for the diversity we see.

Consider, that if an electron is a particle with spin, that it has structure. If it has structure it has size, if it has charge, then it affects the space or fields around it, if it can do that it can still be a particle on a specific trajectory and at the same time affect distant objects without even touching them. In other words an electron may be a particle, but its physical attributes may extend beyond what we would call its particle dimensions.

Anyways, that's how I see it.
 
  • #21
sd01g said:
Why would anyone assume that anything real had zero volume?...maybe because the math is easier.
I'm not the best one to form an opinion here, but in this case I believe you are exactly correct. In QFT, particles are assumed to have zero volume, that is to say are assumed to be point particles because the math is easier. Easier than if you didn't make the assumption, I mean. Lacking this assumption, you might for instance assume that particles were not points, but curved lines. The math is harder, but not impossible. But then it wouldn't be QFT would it? It would be string theory. Am I right about this?

As for measuring a volume and getting zero, I doubt that there is any practical way to do it. For instance, I don't think you can measure any distance and get an exact number. The best you could do is get a number and some error bars. Why should zero be any different?
 
  • #22
Sean Torrebadel said:
There is no such thing as a point particle. All elementary particles have spin which infers that they have some sort of internal structure. Point particles is a construct created by Coulombs electrostatic treatment of electric forces between charged particles.

Second, be carefull the way you throw 'fundamental particles' around conceptually. For instance, the proton, neutron and electron are all suppose to be elementary particles, which is interesting because we know that the neutron can decay, so what makes it elementary? The photon is considered to be elementary in the stricktest sense, even though it can form through the annihilation of an electron with a positron, and it can decay into each respectively.

Next, if you are having a hard time appreciating what a particle is, what it is composed of an where its boundary is, for example, individual electrons shot through a two slit barrier produce an interference pattern, so how does the electron interfere with itself-some suggest that it passes through both holes simultaneously...

The answer is clear, that there is no foundation for your intellect to group, organize, and arrange these concepts. The idea of a fundamental particle is particularly interesting because it suggests that below all of the particles is a fundamental particle, a building block for the diversity we see.

Consider, that if an electron is a particle with spin, that it has structure. If it has structure it has size, if it has charge, then it affects the space or fields around it, if it can do that it can still be a particle on a specific trajectory and at the same time affect distant objects without even touching them. In other words an electron may be a particle, but its physical attributes may extend beyond what we would call its particle dimensions.

Anyways, that's how I see it.


We dont't call it that the photon decays..
Why must spin has anything to do about size? Can you explain that from a QFT-point of view?
 
  • #23
malawi_glenn said:
We dont't call it that the photon decays..
Why must spin has anything to do about size? Can you explain that from a QFT-point of view?

No, I'm using logic here. Logic dictates that for something to spin it must have a dimension. If it is a miniscule point in space- what spins? Also sorry Malawi if I used the term decay loosely...
 
  • #24
Sean Torrebadel said:
No, I'm using logic here. Logic dictates that for something to spin it must have a dimension. If it is a miniscule point in space- what spins? Also sorry Malawi if I used the term decay loosely...
Why do you think something is spinning?



p.s. at the risk of going off onto a tangent, I would like to point out that objects do not have a dimension, so you'll have to be more specific about what you mean. Furthermore, I don't see the problem with the idea of a point particle actually spinning.
 
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  • #25
But there is a difference between the ordinary day word spin and physical quantity (quantized) spin... (as Hurkyl pointed out; who has said that they are spinning?) You can't use philosofical logic to describe physics, you must use the mathematical appraturs (formalism). And now QFT etc are the formalism that you use as a physicists.

I don't know if electrons has size or not, if the world are made up of strings or whatever; the thing I am concerned about is that you use the right way to proov things. I mean, you can't fly to the moon and say "Hey Guyds, you know what? I did not see God on my way to the moon, so therefore God does not exists!"

When QM was instroduced, it was contradiction with common sense. Human language and philosophical logic fails to describe nature. To describe nature we need the mathematical language.
 
  • #26
My understanding, in cartesian and mathematically, is that point, line, plane define geometical dimensions. A point has no dimensions. A line has one, a plane two and a sphere three. When you talk about the internal spin of an electron, I would philosophically argue that for it to have an internal spin that it would have to posses a body, a composite nature. It has to have a shape or a form that can spin. You may accept quark theory or whatever.

Just because a mathematical construct, grounded in statistics and probability choses to mathematically treat an electron as a point or a cloud, does not mean that it actuality is any of these. Yes, I agree that mathematics is the language of science, but how it treats reality may transform it into something that no longer resembles its actuality. This point of view does not discriminate against QM, rather it attempts to recognize that how we treat the electron mathematically does not preclude the possibility of it possessing an internal structure.
 
  • #27
Sean Torrebadel said:
When you talk about the internal spin of an electron, I would philosophically argue that for it to have an internal spin that it would have to posses a body, a composite nature.
By "philosophical" I assume you mean "non-mathematical and non-scientific". What rationale can you give for rejecting the mathematical treatment of mathematical entities?!


Just because a mathematical construct, grounded in statistics and probability choses to mathematically treat an electron as a point or a cloud, does not mean that it actuality is any of these.
Of course; that's why scientists perform experiments. And since all experimental data to date affirms this mathematical construct...
 
  • #28
I'm not rejecting mathematical treatment. I'm not saying that particles don't have spin. I am saying that spin infers structure. That spin, as in quantum theory, represents a physical spin of a particle. like a spinning top. For it to spin it needs to have body, shape, and form, and therefore it cannot be an infinitesimal point, which does not have any physical presence.

There is evidence to support that electrons, are composite, and I believed that this was used by the quark theory to qualify its composite model-? If an electron were composed of quarks, how could it be a point. Unless you are suggesting that quarks are points and that they superimpose over one another...into a single point.

Hey I may be wrong, and you don't need to get so agitated. "?!"
 
  • #29
Again Sean Torrebadel; no one as EVER said that the spin of electron has ANYTHING to do with spin in macroscopocal sense (spinning around its symmetry axis). Have you ever studied Quantum field theroy at university/college? You must take into account that


No there is NO evidence that supports that electrons are made up of quarks. You must have mixed that up with the nuclen (proton, neutron; since I saw in one of your earlier post that you argued that the proton was not to considerad as an elementary particle, and that is true: The proton is made up of 3valance quarks that gives it its quantum numbers, and a sea of quark antiquark pairs and gluon plasma). As Hurkyl said, all evidence points in favor for the electron beeing a point particle.

Spin in QM theory is to denote the responce of an external magnetic field (c.f Stern Gerlasch). And you can't argue from classical electrodynamics that it must spinning round its symmetry axis, you must use QED.
 
  • #30
How can two points collide? An electron must have a physical body to collide. Otherwise the photoelectric effect is meaningless, as well as the compton theory.
 
  • #31
Sean Torrebadel said:
How can two points collide? An electron must have a physical body to collide. Otherwise the photoelectric effect is meaningless, as well as the compton theory.

The picture that particle collides is a classical picture, again go back to QED ;)
Interaction is done by emssion of field quanta...
 
  • #32
So your point is that a philosophy of science is now invalid, because QM, QT, QED, is pre-emptory...
 
  • #33
Experiments and real nature has higher priority than philiosophy that man has made.
You have real problems with the quantum world. In QM particles don't follow well defined trajectoires, and they don't collide as two balls etc. Takes some time to melt.. Remember the Bohr-Einstein debate. Einstein: "There must be another, better theory than QM". Bohr: "No the theory is very good, it is nature itself that is strange".
 
  • #35
Sean Torrebadel said:

There is nothing there that supports your thesis that electrons have internal structure

Now you said that they had proven that electrons is made up of quarks, can you show us?

"Classically this could occur if the electron were a spinning ball of charge, and this property was called electron spin."

Note the word "Classically" this COULD occur as if the electron was a spinning ball.
 
  • #36
There is evidence that the electron has an intrinsic angular momentum in addition to its orbital angular momentum. It has a spin 1/2 or -1/2. Even if QT treats the electron differently, the evidence still exists.
 
  • #37
yes of course, no one is against that the electron posesses instrinsic spin, the question is HOW it gets it. Is it a ball spinning around its own axis? Or has it to the with something else?

The discussion was if the electron has internal structure and spatial extension. Neither me or Hurkyl has rejected that the electron don't posesses spin, but we argues that the it is consistent with the physical formalism and math that the electron can be point particle AND posess spin at the same time. You said that this is a paradox, and the electron MUST be seen as a small ball (or something with spatial extension), but here we are against you and we are arguing that the electron is pointlike and that you must skip the nonmathematical philosophy in order to discuss the properties of electron, matter and nature.

So this senctance
"Classically this COULD occur if the electron were a spinning ball of charge, and this property was called electron spin."
It is not saying that the electron IS a spinning ball of charge. This is also an example of the wave-particle duality; is matter particles, waves? what is it?


so where is the proof you said you had that the electron was composite of quarks?..
 
  • #38
Sean Torrebadel said:
So your point is that a philosophy of science is now invalid, because QM, QT, QED, is pre-emptory...
No; the point is that quantum field theory is a very different theory than classical mechanics. Therefore, we should expect the ontology of quantum field theory to be very different than the ontology of classical mechanics. (And, indeed, it is!)
 
  • #39
Protons are suppose to be composed of quarks, protons are treated as point particles as well are they not? So the same argument should hold via viz for protons as electrons-even if there is no proof of an electrons internal structure. Still, an internal spin of an electron infers structure. Since, there is no way for even a mathematical point to spin -internally.
Look, its okay to treat an electron, to ignore its size and dimension, as a point. But that treatment doesn't justify that it is a point.
 
  • #40
Sean Torrebadel said:
Look, its okay to treat an electron, to ignore its size and dimension, as a point. But that treatment doesn't justify that it is a point.
Of course not. The justification comes from the fact that all experimental data agrees with this treatment.


P.S. "ignoring the size of an object" is very different from "asserting that an object has the size of a point."
 
  • #41
Sean Torrebadel said:
Protons are suppose to be composed of quarks, protons are treated as point particles as well are they not? So the same argument should hold via viz for protons as electrons-even if there is no proof of an electrons internal structure. Still, an internal spin of an electron infers structure. Since, there is no way for even a mathematical point to spin -internally.
Look, its okay to treat an electron, to ignore its size and dimension, as a point. But that treatment doesn't justify that it is a point.

No protons are not treated as point particles, since we know that they are composite of quarks, and have structure factors and so on.
You must argue that the electron has internal structure from the laws of physics and then prove it experimentally. The laws of physics here is NOT classical mechanics, but QFT and Elementary particle physics. Of course can you have this spin even without an internal structure, because its instrinsic angular momenta responces same to an external magnetic field AS IF it was a spinning ball of charge. Separate the fenomenological classical ANALOGY with real fact.
And as Hurkyl said, all evidence that we have now points to that the electron is a point, so you can't really trow that away.. You must first invent a new theory than QFT then you should have it tested to confirm it.
 
  • #42
so are you saying that a quark is made up of charges, so charges are the building blocks of everything? If that is the case then what makes up a charge?
 
  • #43
LewDog said:
so are you saying that a quark is made up of charges, so charges are the building blocks of everything? If that is the case then what makes up a charge?

what where when? :S
 
  • #44
sorry i miss read the as if in "Of course can you have this spin even without an internal structure, because its instrinsic angular momenta responces same to an external magnetic field AS IF it was a spinning ball of charge". But what in theory do they think makes up a quark and give it's properties, if it is made up of something?
 
  • #45
there are many theories, string theories and so on, that deals with multidimensional space (more than three dimensions). But Iam not an expert on that. In the standard model of elementary particles if I don't missmind quarks are also (as electrons) treated as point particles. And also all experiments don't show us anything else (as far as I know of).

The point is that, I don't say that elementary particles MUST be point particles, but the way you must argue is with physical models, theoreis and experiment, not the philosophical non-mathematical / classical physics reasoning as for example Sean Torrebadel has done in this thread.
 
  • #46
Alright, I'm a little lost here. Can you explain how an electron and a positron collide, how they annihilate completely into a photon? Is this a mediated process too? For it still sticks in my mind that if these two are points, that two points cannot collide. M or U.

It is interesting, though, because if I were to treat anything as a point it would be a photon.
 
  • #47
Originally Posted by sd01g
It seems to me that it is impossible to measure something of zero volume

Hurkyl said:
Why is that?

Your insistence that all mathematical truths have (interpretation) meaning with respect to a particular application (physics) is false.

It is clear to me that there are no physical things that have zero volume.
All physical objects have some volume.

There are no physical things that are not three dimentional.

That we can mathematically talk about more or less than three dimentions does not entail that there are more or less than three dimentions in physical reality.

The concept of point-object is absurd, in physics.

The BB does not entail a beginning at all.

There cannot be, logically, a beginning of time ..with or without magical Gods.
 
  • #48
Owen Holden said:
Originally Posted by sd01g
It seems to me that it is impossible to measure something of zero volume



Your insistence that all mathematical truths have (interpretation) meaning with respect to a particular application (physics) is false.

It is clear to me that there are no physical things that have zero volume.
All physical objects have some volume.

There are no physical things that are not three dimentional.

That we can mathematically talk about more or less than three dimentions does not entail that there are more or less than three dimentions in physical reality.

The concept of point-object is absurd, in physics.

The BB does not entail a beginning at all.

There cannot be, logically, a beginning of time ..with or without magical Gods.

But you also need to look at your objection here, because it is based on nothing more than a matter of personal tastes. You have not shown why such mathematical description isn't consistent with the empirical evidence that we have. That, is "physical reality". It isn't a "physical reality" when you object to something simply because it doesn't sit well with you.

Something is absurd in physics if one demands that something is valid without no empirical evidence to back it. One must also consider that one is using the word "particle" in the CLASSICAL SENSE, which would also be another absurdity because of what we already know about the behavior of quantum particles such as electrons. Do not get hung up on the ordinary common word while ignoring the physics definition and description. This is what seems to be going on here, and you are putting the cart before the horse. From what I can see, this is the root cause of this "debate".

Zz.
 
  • #49
Hurkyl said:
Of course not. The justification comes from the fact that all experimental data agrees with this treatment.


P.S. "ignoring the size of an object" is very different from "asserting that an object has the size of a point."

What is the size of a point?

Surely there are no physical objects of 'one' dimention.
Points are (mathematical) geometrical concepts.

How does a physical object have size if it has no dimention??

Dimentions are mathematical concepts not physical concepts.
 
  • #50
Owen Holden said:
What is the size of a point?

Surely there are no physical objects of 'one' dimention.
Points are (mathematical) geometrical concepts.

How does a physical object have size if it has no dimention??

Dimentions are mathematical concepts not physical concepts.

But a "point" is a CLASSICAL concept!

We are stuck with using many identical words, but the physics is DIFFERENT! A "particle" and a "wave" in quantum mechanics do not resemble ANY of the classical concepts that we are familiar with. Try finding the physical spatial boundary of an electron! When such an idea isn't even defined in physics, then this makes the idea of a "volume" for such an object highly absurd as well! This is what you are demanding that it has!

Zz.
 
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