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Alpha Sequence, The: Electromagnetic Origin Of The Strong And Weak Nuclear Forces (Hardcover)
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Alpha Sequence, The: Electromagnetic Origin Of The Strong And Weak Nuclear Forces (Hardcover)
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This book is centered on a surprising Tevatron and LHC experimental
result, the accurate equality of gauge boson and top quark energy
Ew + Ez = Et. The ramifications of this unanticipated result extend
down to the lower energies, and lead to two new elementary particle
paradigms. The first is the use of energies E rather than masses m
for analysing particle excitation patterns, where E =mc2. The
second is the recognition that ground-state particle energies are
generated in the form of quantized energy packets that are produced
in ' -boost' energy excitations, where -1 ~137 is the fine
structure constant. Repeated -boosts form a 'reservoir' of energy
packets, which merge and reproduce the quantized energies of the
various particle and quark ground-state configurations. An
-generated energy excitation path extends upward from the electron
to the top quark t. The steps in this path, which contain two
-boosts, combine coherently to give the energy equation Eelectron x
18/ 2 = Et, which is accurate to 0.3%. A branching energy path
reproduces the energy of the bottom quark b to 0.1%.Particle
energies and lifetimes are conjugate quantities, and the -quantized
particle energies are reflected in -quantized particle mean
lifetimes, as revealed by lifetime plots on a logarithmic -spaced
grid. The accurate factor-of-137 spacings between the classical
electron radius, Compton radius, and Bohr orbit radius suggest
introducing both a radial and a mass dependence into , which leads
to an equation for the transformation of Coulomb energy into
electron non-electromagnetic mass. The electron spin and magnetic
moment are reproduced by a Compton-sized relativistically spinning
sphere (RSS). The anomalous electron magnetic moment is also
accounted for by the RSS, in response to Richard Feynman's 1961
Challenge to provide such an explanation. The mathematics used here
is straightforward, and the calculations are guided by fits to the
elementary particle RPP energy and lifetime data bases, which are
provided here in Appendices A and B.
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