- #1
kurious
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Quarks can't exist in isolation and the electric charge on quarks can't exist in isolation from the electric charges of other quarks either.The electric charge of leptons like the electron can exist in isolation.Isn't electromagnetism showing a kind of asymmetry here: symmetry could be restored if the electron was made of quarks!
The electron has a mass many times smaller than the rest masses of up and down quarks which are classified as light quarks.Light quarks have more gluons which account for most of the rest mass of hadrons that are composed of them.An electron made from quarks would be expected to have even more
gluons between its quarks than a proton.This would mean that the colour force would be stronger between quarks in an electron than between quarks in a proton.The residual colour force - the strong force - between electrons- would be expected to have a force carrier with a higher mass than the strong force carrier for hadrons, the meson (using Yukawa's argument for
force carriers).We would expect to observe electrons attracting or repelling one another at very short distances because of their residual colour force.
But the electric repulsion of one electron for another could swamp the effect,
so it goes unnoticed.Any thoughts on this - I'll try and do a calculation of
the forces later.
The electron has a mass many times smaller than the rest masses of up and down quarks which are classified as light quarks.Light quarks have more gluons which account for most of the rest mass of hadrons that are composed of them.An electron made from quarks would be expected to have even more
gluons between its quarks than a proton.This would mean that the colour force would be stronger between quarks in an electron than between quarks in a proton.The residual colour force - the strong force - between electrons- would be expected to have a force carrier with a higher mass than the strong force carrier for hadrons, the meson (using Yukawa's argument for
force carriers).We would expect to observe electrons attracting or repelling one another at very short distances because of their residual colour force.
But the electric repulsion of one electron for another could swamp the effect,
so it goes unnoticed.Any thoughts on this - I'll try and do a calculation of
the forces later.
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