cas
- 1
- 0
Does anyone know if it is possible to compress an electron. If it is, what would happen.
cas said:Does anyone know if it is possible to compress an electron.
hurk4 said:The Comptonlenght of a free electron certainly is smaller than the Comptonlenght of a neutron in which it is contained.
Meir Achuz said:The "Compton wavelength" has nothing to do with the size of an object.
jtbell said:Neutrons do not contain electrons.
RaymondKennethPetry said:6. Why do you insist on jumping new-theory that neutrons do not contain the electron they absorbed to emit, that sounds so presumptuous on that we define as the electron...?- Where does the definition terminate so long as it remains in the same place and is extractible eg. by neutrino-strike...?
ZapperZ said:Could you please point to me the physics (citing a paper would be good) that produces the theory that a neutron has in it an electron? After you do that, then explain to me the fallacy of the weak interaction.
Zz.
RaymondKennethPetry said:There are lots of experiments that have not been done or are extremely difficult to cite (even by Internet search) because they did not ask the questions I asked: Myself, I haven't even found proton-electron collisions creating neutrons releasing neutrinos ... I know of nuclear EC ... and even proton-proton collisions produce electrons via Z's ... Collision experiments done in high energy physics boost the incident particles above activation energies: and whatever mass-energy mode is there, by however much mass-energy, results in interesting products ... I'm not suggesting the neutron is not a distinct particle; I'm just saying it's not so distinct as to label a deuteron a new particle too: Both are still fusions of protons and electrons, that can come apart to the original constituents ...
(I think the general confusion is that electrons are small enough mass-energy that it's become fashion to consider them -secondary- particles resulting from higher energy interactions, not elemental particles.)
Other experiments to try: 1. Collision of a neutron and an electron: Does it stick (It certainly does not repel), and what's its Beta-decay rate: how long does it last in attoseconds (I expect it's less stable than the neutron lasting 614 sec. halflife)? They did it for H-4, Why not negaton-1 (not a negatron)? 2. Collision of a proton and an antielectron: Is there a p++ particle, and how long does it last in attoseconds before shattering in pion-kaon-Z-electron spray?
Ray.