Elementary Particles
Standard Model of Elementary
Particles
The McGraw-Hill Encyclopedia of Science and Technology (1992) defines
an elementary particle as "A particle that is not a compound of other
particles." By this definition, there are about 500 particles that have
been "discovered" in collider experiments. Except for the electron,
proton, positron, and antiproton, the "particles" are unstable and
exist only for short times. The evidence for such "particles" is the
burst of light, the heat given off, or a short track left from a
collision between an electron or proton and its corresponding
antiparticle (positrons and antiprotons).
Evidently, these short term, transient events are
observations of the debris of a violent collision. There seems to be no
limit to the number of "particles" that can be discovered as the
velocity of the collision is increased. So, quarks were invented and
pronounced to be the components of neutrons and protons, making quarks
the new elementary particles instead of neutrons and protons. This was
just as well, since it was known from the Robson experiment (1951) that
a neutron outside the atomic nucleus disintegrates into one electron
and one proton. The electron, however, is still considered an
elementary particle (although suggestions have been made that it is
composed of subquarks).
Despite sensational claims of finding all six
types of quarks predicted by modern theory, a quark has never been
directly observed, and its existence is known only by inference and
correspondence of its expected properties with the light, heat and path
generated by a violent collision. It is logically inconsistent, of
course, for the electron to be an elementary particle that has no
quarks when it is the decay product of a neutron that is supposed to be
composed of three quarks.
CSS Elementary Particle
There are only four stable charged particles that are not a compound of
other particles. These are the electron, proton, positron and
antiproton. A single model, the spinning charged ring, accounts for the
observed properties of all four elementary particles. In this model,
the structure and shape of the particle are the same, including the
ratio of ring diameter to the ring thickness diameter; the size of the
ring and its charge each take on two values. In atomic nuclei, a
"neutron" is a paired electron and proton.
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