welatiger
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Is the discovery of Higgs boson contradict the Compositeness model and the preon existence ?!
The discussion revolves around the concept of compositeness in particle physics, specifically regarding quarks and leptons, and the implications of the Higgs boson discovery on these models. Participants explore theoretical frameworks, including the compositeness model and preon theories, while addressing the relevance of experimental evidence and the Standard Model.
Participants express a mix of agreement and disagreement. While there is a consensus on the lack of evidence for compositeness, the implications of the Higgs boson discovery and the validity of various models remain contested. The discussion does not reach a definitive conclusion on these points.
Participants highlight limitations in the current understanding of compositeness, including unresolved mathematical steps and the dependence on definitions of terms like "composite" and "point-like." The discussion also reflects varying levels of familiarity with the topic among participants.
welatiger said:Is the discovery of Higgs boson contradict the Compositeness model and the preon existence ?!
mathman said:The Higgs boson was considered part of the Standard Model, so nothing has changed.
Note: Your sentence is unclear - could you define the terms?
To be honest, I never heard of the compositeness model.welatiger said:You Know that in the compositeness model, the spontaneous symmetry breaking is due to the preon but not the Higgs boson.
mathman said:To be honest, I never heard of the compositeness model.
welatiger said:Dear all
The compositness model was first proposed by A.Salam 1970, mainly due to the hairechary problem, you can read about it in wiki pages.
arivero said:Do you mean, you have never heard of _any_ compositeness model? Fascinating.
It is not just Wikipedia. It is the overwhelming consensus of the physics community that there is no evidence for compositeness of leptons and quarks.arivero said:Perhaps the point is if there is someone here in the forum.who is interested on composites. If nobody can comment beyond the wikipedia, it is probably not worth to raise the topic here.
mathman said:It is not just Wikipedia. It is the overwhelming consensus of the physics community that there is no evidence for compositeness of leptons and quarks
DimReg said:If a particle is composite, it has to have a finite radius
DimReg said:I'm not sure how I would rigorously prove this for a general case. However, as a model you can use the infinite spherical well potential, so inside the radius the particle is free to move but a very strong restoring force holds the particle in if it tries to leave that radius (also, you do the usual trick of reducing a two body problem to a one body problem). The ground state energy (actually all energy levels) goes as r^-2, where r is the radius of the well. Clearly this diverges when r goes to 0.
But most importantly, there isn't some derived rule that says that the string has to be an extended object, it is the postulated form a particle takes, and thus by construction the string in string theory is extended.