- #281
nikkkom
- 2,075
- 400
A. Neumaier said:No, definitely not. Virtualness is a matter of where something appears in a Feynman diagram, hence none-or-all. It is meaningless to say that a particle is described to 90% by an external line and to 10% by an internal line. Virtual particles are by definition (in any textbook where they are defined) terminology for internal lines of a diagram.
I think everyone agrees with the above.
The thing is, you don't just state the above statement, you proceed with other statements such as:
"The word virtual is an antonym to real – unlike the general readership of popular literature on particle physics, the creators of the terminology were well aware that virtual particles are not real in any observable sense".
and
"They cannot cause anything or interact with anything".
Since we established that all unstable particles can be seen as virtual, this means that muons from cosmic ray showers are virtual too.
It's hard to agree that these muons "are not real in any observable sense" and "cannot cause anything or interact with anything", when physicists have to hide under several kilometers of rock (!) to decrease muon-induced background in their DM detection experiments. Clearly, muons do "interact", "cause" events to happen and thus are "real" and "observable".