(Qi Yang/Getty Images)
'Spin' is a fundamental quality of fundamental
particles like the electron, invoking images of a tiny sphere revolving rapidly
on its axis like a planet in a shrunken solar system.
Only it isn't. It can't. For one thing, electrons
aren't spheres of matter but points described by the mathematics of
probability.
But California Institute of Technology philosopher
of physics Charles T. Sebens argues such a particle-based approach to one of
the most accurate theories in physics might be misleading us.
By framing the groundwork of matter primarily in
terms of fields, he says, certain peculiarities and paradoxes that emerge from
a particle-centric view melt away.
"Philosophers tend to be attracted to problems
that have been unsolved for a really long time," says Sebens.
"In quantum mechanics, we have ways of
predicting the results of experiments that work very well for electrons and
account for a spin, but important foundational questions remain unanswered: Why
do these methods work, and what's happening inside an atom?"
For the better part of a century, physicists have
wrestled with the results of experiments that suggest the smallest pieces of
reality don't look or behave anything like objects in our everyday lives.
Spin is one of these qualities. Like a whirling cue
ball colliding with the inner wall of a billiard table, it carries angular
momentum and influences the direction of a moving particle. Yet, unlike the cue
ball, a particle's spin can never speed up or slow down – rather, it's always
confined to a set value.
To make the basic nature of matter even harder to
picture, consider the fact an electron's size is so small that it effectively
lacks volume. If it were large enough to have volume, the negative charge
spread throughout that space would push on itself, tearing the electron apart.
Significantly, even if we were to be charitable and
grant the electron as a particle the largest radius experiments would allow
for, its rotation would overtake the speed of light – something which might or
might not be a deal-breaker on this scale, but for many physicists is enough to
dismiss talk of rotating electrons.
One way to make the tapestry of fundamental physics
a little easier to map is to describe points of matter as actions embedded into
the weave of a field and then interpret these actions as particles.
Quantum field theory (QFT) does this successfully,
weaving together aspects of Einstein's special theory of relativity, classical
field theory, and the particle propositions of quantum physics.
It's not a controversial theory, yet there is still
debate over whether those fields are fundamental – existing even if the blips
that ripple through them were to fall silent – or if particles are the main
actors that represent the vital information and fields are just a convenient
script.
To us, it might seem like a trivial distinction. But
to philosophers like Sebens, the consequences are worth exploring.
As he explained in a 2019 article featured in Aeon
magazine: "Sometimes progress in physics requires first backing up to
reexamine, reinterpret, and revise the theories that we already have."
That reexamination of quantum field theory
emphasizes several significant advantages to making fields a priority in
physics over a particle-first approach, including a model that re-imagines
electrons in ways that might give us better insights into their behavior.
"In an atom, the electron is often depicted as
a cloud showing where the electron might be found, but I think that the
electron is actually physically spread out over that cloud," Sebens says.
By being physically spread out through a field
rather than confined to a point, an electron might actually rotate in ways that
are less mathematical constructs and more a physical description.
Although it would still not be anything like a tiny
planet in a solar system, this rotating electron would at least move at a speed
that doesn't challenge any laws.
Just how this diffuse spread of negatively charged
matter resists blowing itself apart is a question Sebens doesn't have an answer
for. But by focusing on the field aspects of a spread-out electron, he feels
any solutions would make more sense than issues that arise from particles of
infinite confinement.
There's a quote that has become folklore in the
halls of quantum theorists – "Shut up and calculate." It's become a
saying synonymous with the aphantasic landscape of the quantum realm, where
imagery and metaphor fail to compete with the uncanny precision of pure
mathematics.
Every now and then, though, it's important to pause
our calculations and indulge in challenging a few old assumptions – and maybe
even turn around for a new perspective on the fundamentals of physics.
Reference: Synthese.
0 Comments