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DrDick1954
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Your question requires clarification. You are not asking for proof of the nature of ANY particle, you are looking for the characterizations which are unique to any PARTICULAR particle. In other words, what makes a neutron, or an electron, or a neutrino, or a positron unique and separately defined from any other particle, and perhaps also the experimental proof that verifies these differentiations. So first, confirm that this is REALLY what you are asking...Iloveyou said:Summary: What is exactly the reasonable context for the existence of particles
I studied physics in University a bit out of interest. Curious on how exactly one proves the existence of particles.
If I look it up, often the most basic example would be the cathode ray experiment. It seems pretty simple to me, but in my eyes it does not prove the existence of particles. What I'm interested is first and foremost how one goes from the physical observable to actually creating a model for it. I don't really see a way to do that without making assumptions.
And if this is done on a basic level of physics and then new theories are limited by the former theory which is based on assumption. If the assumption was incorrect, then would not all qualitative aspects of new theories be compromised.
It is obvious that an infinite different version of qualitative theories can achieve the same quantitative result. For instance if an anomaly within the system of a theory occured, one could just as easily invent any mathematical entity to compensate. I'm interested in what on the fundamental level justifies the jump. Because I did not study physics in depth I am very curious about the fundamental procedure.
With regards to the proof of electrons, I am curious within the context of simple reason hoping the process is not just picking the least absurd theory available. If we had chosen a different model, in my eyes it would still be quantitavely consistent because it would've been modified to account for contrary data, no?