Berlin 2005 – wissenschaftliches Programm
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T: Teilchenphysik
T 308: Higgs I
T 308.10: Vortrag
Freitag, 4. März 2005, 18:45–19:00, TU H3002
The Origin of the Particle Mass — •Albrecht Giese — Taxusweg 15, 22605 Hamburg
According to the standard model elementary particles originally do not have a mass. So mass needs a specific physical origin. The search for Higgs bosons is a consequence of this consideration.
However, there is already a basic solution if we follow Dirac and Schrödinger (1928/30): Electrons have an internal oscillatory motion with the constant speed of light c. This is logically only possible if the particle has 2 mass-less constituents bound to each other in a such way, that a certain distance between them is maintained. As on other hand the binding field propagates at the limited speed of light, such a configuration inevitably exhibits an inertial behaviour. - If we now assume that this model is applicable for all elementary particles, that means leptons and quarks, then the inertial behaviour (i.e. the mass) of all particles is quantitatively explained.
The relativistic increase of the mass at motion and thus the mass-energy equivalence are consequences of this particle model.
The quantity of the magnetic moment and the constant spin of a particle can also be classically derived using this approach.
For further details refer to www.ag-physics.org/rmass