The Quantum Theory of the Electron and the Photon

Foundations of physics and/or philosophy of physics, and in particular, posts on unresolved or controversial issues

The Quantum Theory of the Electron and the Photon

Postby Yablon » Sun Oct 15, 2017 7:11 am

Dear Friends,

It has been awhile since I posted here. But in addition to spending a lot of quality time with my two new grandsons and tending to my patent business, I have been quietly busy with my physics enterprise over the past several months. The result is a draft paper at http://vixra.org/pdf/1710.0159v1.pdf which is still a few week away from completion, but which contains enough new material that I felt compelled to share it publicly at this time.

Briefly, several months ago I submitted by work on Lorentz force geometrization and electromagnetic time dilations to a top journal and it was rejected. The core of the rejection was that the metric which is (3.3) in the present paper was "peculiar" and apparently not in accord with known relativistic physics because of its being quadratic in the line element . I recognized that the reviewer was wrong to have knee-jerk rejected because of an unusual-looking metric, but as I thought about it I realized that the quadratic solution to this metric which is (3.5) in this paper actually did warrant a level of deep development that I had not previously done. I simply was presenting (3.5) as a result but not studying it closely to see where it leads. So although the review made a wrong rejection, it was actually very helpful, because by targeting these two equations it forced my to develop (3.3) and (3.5). The present paper is that development.

Specifically, following this review, I quickly came to realize that (3.5) when pursued to its logical conclusion, leads to a heretofore unknown variant of Dirac's equation which is finally arrived at, at (12.5) and (12.6). This does for Dirac theory what general relativity did for Newton's theory: it contains the earlier theory in the linear limit, but produces even greater precision for the predictions and explanations that the theory offers. And perhaps the most important new precision it offers, is that it naturally encompasses the magnetic moment anomaly in a way that Dirac theory does not.

If somebody is honest about Dirac's equation, they must admit that it does not, by itself, explain the magnetic moment anomaly with a g-factor slightly larger than 2. It only explains the Dirac g-factor being equal to 2. The anomaly requires ad hoc add-ons to Dirac, in the form of renormalization which is very accurate, but also with infinities which are very funky as Dirac and Feynman and many others have recognized. Here, the Dirac equation naturally contains the anomalies without having to add on anything. Using Newton and GR as an example, attempting to explain the anomaly using Dirac's equation is like trying to explain perihelion precession using Newton's equation. It may be possible, but it is rather ugly.

Those who have followed my work will know that I have previously used the EM time dilations to explain the anomaly. But if I am honest, I did so in a way that relied partly upon my own intuition. Here, the anomaly explanation grows out of the rigorous mathematical development with no intuition required, and while as I have always believed the lepton anomalies are connected to the EM time dilations arising from electromagnetic self-interactions (which self-interactions are what the Feynman loop diagrams are all about), the rigorous development taught me that my previous connection of time dilation to the anomaly was off by about a factor of 2.

In sections 19 and 22, for those who would (rightly) demand ways to experimentally test this theory, I have presented seven different tests so far, using my Dirac Hamiltonian (16.13) / (16.14). The final material I plan to develop in the next few weeks before this paper is fully complete, will do for the magnetic moment portion of the Hamiltonian, what present sections 21 and 22 do for the classical Schrödinger portion of the Hamiltonian. I anticipate coming across additional experiments in the process.

So that is the overview. As always, I find value in the feedback I receive from anybody who undertakes a serious review. Thank you for your time, and I hope everybody is doing well.

Jay
Yablon
Independent Physics Researcher
 
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Re: The Quantum Theory of the Electron and the Photon

Postby FrediFizzx » Sun Oct 15, 2017 12:49 pm

Hi Jay,

You should figure out how to condense your paper down to about 40 pages. I would like to study it in more depth but that requires printing it out so I can kick back while studying. 87 pages is too much to print out. 20 pages of paper printed on both sides is OK to handle.

Speaking about being honest about the Dirac equation, its local gauge version returns the classical electron radius. And we know from experiment that radius is not correct. Joy and I solved that problem via Einstein-Cartan torsion using the Hehl-Datta non-linear Dirac equation. Now... I wonder how your discovery affects what we found.
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Re: The Quantum Theory of the Electron and the Photon

Postby Yablon » Mon Oct 16, 2017 8:01 am

FrediFizzx wrote:You should figure out how to condense your paper down to about 40 pages. I would like to study it in more depth but that requires printing it out so I can kick back while studying. 87 pages is too much to print out. 20 pages of paper printed on both sides is OK to handle.

Well Fred, if the amount of paper is the problem, buy an extra ream and send me the bill. ;) In all seriousness, I started writing this intending to make it brief. But once I realized that this produced a new Dirac equation, one thing led to another and here we are almost 100 pages later. There is no question I can do a summary; but reviewers also will have to verify that the calculations are correct so I cannot just gloss that over. I will suggest when I next submit this, that I cab produce a summary and put the full paper on "deposit" for publicly-available inspection.
FrediFizzx wrote:Speaking about being honest about the Dirac equation, its local gauge version returns the classical electron radius. And we know from experiment that radius is not correct. Joy and I solved that problem via Einstein-Cartan torsion using the Hehl-Datta non-linear Dirac equation. Now... I wonder how your discovery affects what we found.

Go to my section 19 which is one of the key findings. I think you will find that a statistical diameter on the order of the Compton wavelength makes much more sense, and is something that experiments can verify. This is a key one of my seven proposed tests. And by the way, this was in my earlier papers, but in the present paper, my result has changed by the factor of 2 which I mentioned yesterday. Dirac's equation introduces factors of 2 everywhere. We already have known some of them for decades. My paper is pointing out several more.

Jay
Yablon
Independent Physics Researcher
 
Posts: 365
Joined: Tue Feb 04, 2014 10:39 pm
Location: New York


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