Lapidus said:
>I'm not a particle physicist
You quote this, why? Is it because you don't think anyone who's actually a particle physicist would agree with what I'm saying? Because they certainly http://arnold-neumaier.at/physfaq/topics/virtual1" .
Lapidus said:
In paragraph one it says: virtual particles, particles that are annihilated very shortly after being created.
The full quotes is: "The contributions of virtual particles (particles that are annihilated very shortly after being created) also tend to divergent expressions."
I don't see where t'Hooft actually said they were 'real' things, rather than a mathematical abstraction. Which ones would he mean, by the way, the ones with infinite energy, or the ones in the terms with finite energy, or both?
So could you guys just spare us that 'it is just popular talk for the masses' myth?
I didn't say that. I said it's
jargon used to describe perturbation calculations, which in popular context tends to be given a literal physical interpretation, presented as physical fact, 'proved' by the calculations being correct. When in fact it is
at best a philosophical question whether or not they 'exist'.
Or let me ask this: what are the guys doing at CERN? Where are all these particles they are looking for? How and where does these often very massive particles live that they are searching for??
They're looking for particles predicted by the Standard Model, etc. This is a complete straw-man, given that I already explicitly said I don't dispute the results of the Standard model.
I'm afraid I can't answer "How and where does they live?", because I have no idea what you're talking about.
QFT is a relativistic local theory. Of course do the intermediate states in interactions have a different interpretation in relativistic theories than in non-relativistic theories.
What do you mean "of course"? There's no obvious reason why that'd be the case. How does the inclusion of SR in a physical theory support a particular philosophical interpretation of it?
Besides which, you have lots of relativistic field theories and methods which do not make any use of virtual particles at all. So if that's what's 'real', you'll have to explain why different realities exist alongside each other.
I summarized perturbation theory, roughly as: You neglect an interaction because it creates a mathematically-intractable problem, and then re-introduce that interaction in terms of the fictional non-interacting states.
But you'd like to add that once it's applied to a
relativistic theory, it's
not just a convenient way of solving a mathematical problem, but 'proof' that the interaction physically occurs through a sequence of smaller interactions (some of which have infinite energy and should therefore be neglected(!)), that just happened to sum up in a way that happens to correspond mathematically to the method we used elsewhere, where it was just fictional.
How fortunate!