Can't see what's annoying about raising the question if waves can travel through the Higgs Field and shake nuclei apart … is there any conductivity? It would be similar like saying that electro magnetic waves are annoying or the ripples on a lake … these phenomena simply are. Seems like you have some personal issues for not liking this question, what's up with that? Waves are a neutral thing that shows up all through nature can't see why it wouldn't happen in the Higgs Field.mfb wrote:… your pet crackpot theory is just annoying.
here we go again 2
Re: here we go again 2
Dance, even if you have nowhere to do it but your own living room.
Wear Sunscreen by Baz Luhrmann - Mary Schmich
Wear Sunscreen by Baz Luhrmann - Mary Schmich
Re: here we go again 2
Those waves would be Higgs bosons, in the same way electromagnetic waves can be described with photons and sound in solids with phonons and so on. We know the extremely short lifetime of Higgs bosons.
Re: here we go again 2
More like breaking waves than, since there's a collapse (bang/particle) that emerges out of it?mfb wrote:Those waves would be Higgs bosons …
Do 'we' know this from experience or from predictions?mfb wrote:… We know the extremely short lifetime of Higgs bosons.
Ok, so currently these *sparks* dim out within the distance of an Atom, what if we start increasing energies and velocities, will these 'breaking waves' erupt further and further from the collision center; and will this be a linear or exponential growth … because that's how the Higgs Field conducts these waves and let's them transform into a particle?
Dance, even if you have nowhere to do it but your own living room.
Wear Sunscreen by Baz Luhrmann - Mary Schmich
Wear Sunscreen by Baz Luhrmann - Mary Schmich
Re: here we go again 2
They are not gravity waves on the surface of an ocean, that analogy does not make sense.chelle wrote:More like breaking waves than, since there's a collapse (bang/particle) that emerges out of it?mfb wrote:Those waves would be Higgs bosons …
Both.chelle wrote:Do 'we' know this from experience or from predictions?mfb wrote:… We know the extremely short lifetime of Higgs bosons.
The Higgs boson has a lifetime of about 10^(-22) seconds, the LHC at full luminosity and energy produces about one Higgs boson every 2 seconds. With the high-luminosity upgrade, that might increase to 3.5 per second. In addition, those collisions happen over a volume of ~50µm x 50µm x 5cm, while the Higgs decays before it travels more than a few 10^(-14) meters. You'll never get two Higgs bosons to come together.Ok, so currently these *sparks* dim out within the distance of an Atom, what if we start increasing energies and velocities, will these 'breaking waves' erupt further and further from the collision center; and will this be a linear or exponential growth … because that's how the Higgs Field conducts these waves and let's them transform into a particle?
And where is the point at all? Every nucleus of oxygen has a nucleus with 8 protons and 8 neutrons (or 24 up- and 24 down-valence quarks, and even more sea quarks and gluons). Do you fear oxygen atoms just because multiple particles of the same type are at the same place?
Re: here we go again 2
Hey great to see you show up again.
Of course that doesn't make sense, I was talking about waves in the Higgs Field.mfb wrote:They are not gravity waves on the surface of an ocean, that analogy does not make sense.chelle wrote:More like breaking waves than, since there's a collapse (bang/particle) that emerges out of it?mfb wrote:Those waves would be Higgs bosons …
Ok.mfb wrote:Both.chelle wrote:Do 'we' know this from experience or from predictions?mfb wrote:… We know the extremely short lifetime of Higgs bosons.
No, I’m just curious/worried that the generated ripples in the Higgs Field that create the Higgs Boson, would spread out and collide with with nuclei of the material surrounding the collision spot, and that these collisions between ripples and nuclei will disrupt the inner mechanics of those nuclei, and make them split into pieces. Similar to how the detonation of a chemical explosion in an atom bomb ignites the chain reaction of fission of uranium or plutonium in that nuclear bomb. Ripples that shake things apart.mfb wrote:The Higgs boson has a lifetime of about 10^(-22) seconds, the LHC at full luminosity and energy produces about one Higgs boson every 2 seconds. With the high-luminosity upgrade, that might increase to 3.5 per second. In addition, those collisions happen over a volume of ~50µm x 50µm x 5cm, while the Higgs decays before it travels more than a few 10^(-14) meters. You'll never get two Higgs bosons to come together.Ok, so currently these *sparks* dim out within the distance of an Atom, what if we start increasing energies and velocities, will these 'breaking waves' erupt further and further from the collision center; and will this be a linear or exponential growth … because that's how the Higgs Field conducts these waves and let's them transform into a particle?
And where is the point at all? Every nucleus of oxygen has a nucleus with 8 protons and 8 neutrons (or 24 up- and 24 down-valence quarks, and even more sea quarks and gluons). Do you fear oxygen atoms just because multiple particles of the same type are at the same place?
Dance, even if you have nowhere to do it but your own living room.
Wear Sunscreen by Baz Luhrmann - Mary Schmich
Wear Sunscreen by Baz Luhrmann - Mary Schmich