lottery said:
One thing I don't understand is that most of our theories include particles...the oversimplified analogy is, of course, balls on a billiard table. Even the "theory of everything" or String Theory/M-theory tries to explain everything with one particle and one force. My question is this...why do we need particles anyhow...they seem to get in the way of everything. Can't we just be a universe of forces and no particles per se?
I felt your pain, years ago. Then I did a lot of schooling on the subject...
A sub-atomic particle really isn't a particle per se; it's (take your pick of 'particle') actually both a particle and a wave--I mean,
all of them! Protons, nutrinos, electrons, and yes, even photons are both particle in nature and wavelike in nature. This is called, 'particle/wave duality'.
Why must we have this particle/wave duality? Because of a very thorny aspect of the quantum world called, 'uncertainty', that's why. To elaborate, when we try to measure an electron, for example, we may know the electron's momentum, but are
uncertain about its position in space. Conversely, we may know by observation the electron's position, but are
uncertain about its momentum. This is because our measuring of the electron has the effect of disturbing the observation. In fact, a Physicist (Werner Heisenberg) came up with an equation to describe this uncertainty, and called it the 'uncertainty principle'. The uncertainty principle:
As for mass, it can simply be defined as, "A resistance to a change in motion," thus it's a dimensionless unit. The wavefunction for mass is called the Higgs Boson and is a sub-atomic particle/wave.