Water analogy in Particle Physics

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the unique relationship between water and atmosphere, emphasizing that liquid water cannot exist in a vacuum and requires atmospheric pressure to maintain its liquid state. Participants explore the analogy of water in particle physics, suggesting that concepts like Goldstone bosons and the Higgs field could serve as parallels, where both require specific conditions to exist. The conversation highlights the importance of understanding phase changes and the impact of pressure on states of matter. Ultimately, the consensus is that while analogies can aid in teaching, the direct connection between water and particle physics remains tenuous and unclear. The thread concludes with a sense of frustration over the lack of a clear analogy.
jake jot
Messages
302
Reaction score
17
There is something unusual about water. Without atmosphere, water can't exist. It's as if water is part of atmosphere. In vacuum, liquid water can't exist.

What other things like water where it needs other aspects like atmosphere to exist?

And what is the analogy of water in particle physics where it can't exist in liquid form when there is vacuum?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
jake jot said:
In vacuum, liquid water can't exist.
Liquid water can only exist above the triple point at 273.16 K. At higher temperatures it will evaporate, and so the vacuum will cease to exist.

The atmosphere is composed of all species that are gases at atmospheric temperatures, and that have not yet escaped the planet's gravity.
 
Last edited:
jake jot said:
Without atmosphere, water can't exist.

Frozen water (ice) has been identified on comets and in the rings of Saturn, both places with no atmosphere.

Liquid water will either freeze or evaporate in the absence of an atmosphere, if its surface is open to vacuum, but that doesn't make the water molecules just disappear; they're still there, just not in liquid phase any more.

Liquid water inside a sealed tank can exist just fine if there is vacuum outside the tank.

jake jot said:
it's as if water is part of atmosphere.

Why yes, water vapor is part of the atmosphere. So is liquid water when there are clouds.

jake jot said:
What other things like water where it needs other aspects like atmosphere to exist?

Do you mean, what other things can be liquids under certain conditions? Um, all of them?

I do not understand what your issue is.

jake jot said:
what is the analogy of water in particle physics where it can't exist in liquid form when there is vacuum?

I have no idea what you are talking about.
 
  • Like
Likes davenn
Baluncore said:
I believe the confusion here is the unusual use of the term “particle physics”.

I think the OP needs to clarify what he means by "particle physics". If he means what you describe, he should say so.
 
Liquid water can only exist if there is an atmosphere. Liquid water can't exist in the vacuum of space except as frozen water. I'm focusing on the liquid part.

The atmosphere has to push down on the water molecules for them to be in liquid state. In fact the pressure is even known, 14.7 psi. If you put water below atmospheric pressure and further down near vacuum. It can boil at lower temperature, even 40 celsius.

So liquid water is so connected to the atmosphere. Liquid water can't exist in the vacuum of space but as ice.

Is there analogy in particle physics? For example. Goldstone bosons or Nambu–Goldstone bosons (NGBs) are bosons that appear necessarily in models exhibiting spontaneous breakdown of continuous symmetries. So we can give analogy.

Water = Goldstone bosons
Atmosphere = breakdown of continuous symmetry.

Just like water condenses out of the atmosphere. Goldstone bosons condense from breakdown of continuous symmetry.

But I need other examples. Can the higgs field be one? When there is vacuum, the expectation value is zero and no higgs field. When there is vacuum, water is zero and no liquid. What else in particle physics can you give analogy for water condensing out of atmosphere from vacuum? The key is the word "condensing" and vacuum which is good analogy.
 
  • Skeptical
Likes weirdoguy, Vanadium 50 and Motore
“Analogy”?
Why should there be one? Why look for one? That wouldn’t help with understanding anything.

I imagine that we all have informal processes in our heads which throw up parallels between lots of things. If you feel happy with your private analogies then fair enough. You’ll have a hard job getting grumpy, prosaic PF to join you there, though.
 
jake jot said:
So liquid water is so connected to the atmosphere. Liquid water can't exist in the vacuum of space but as ice.

Even ice will "evaporate" in case the partial pressure of ##H_2O## in the surrounding atmosphere is lower than the saturation pressure of ##H_2O## at the given temperature. This process - the transition from the solid to the gas state - is called sublimation.
 
  • Like
Likes Chestermiller
sophiecentaur said:
“Analogy”?
Why should there be one? Why look for one? That wouldn’t help with understanding anything.

I imagine that we all have informal processes in our heads which throw up parallels between lots of things. If you feel happy with your private analogies then fair enough. You’ll have a hard job getting grumpy, prosaic PF to join you there, though.

All my friends and even professional engineers I know are not even aware water can boil at lower temperature. And none of them know that water is only liquid because of the atmospheric pressure pushing them at 14.7 psi. You remove the pressure, and water turns to vapor.

Also not many know of the Higgs field. So the analogy is for teaching the newbies. Like saying the Higgs field is like the atmosphere which instead of making liquid water stable makes matter stable by having mass. Both create cohesion, something like that.

So what other stuff in particle physics I can use for analogy of the water and atmospheric pressure? Besides Goldstone bosons?
 
  • Skeptical
Likes weirdoguy and Motore
  • #10
The point of an analogy is to explain B to people who understand A by making links between A and B, such as the water analogy to electricity.

There is no point discussing this further, as there is not even a water-particle physics analogy to start with, even less one that laypeople would understand.

Thread closed.
 
  • Like
Likes Bystander
Back
Top