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Secondly I should have described my potential sensors as "conductive" rather than "charged".
Apologies :-(
With energy annihilation, as for instance to resolve Dirac's postulate,
does field annihilation propose a source?
as for instance to resolve Dirac's postulate,
As I understand it, a field needs no source. A field just is. It's a sort of accounting or mapping tool that we can use to describe the universe. Every field exists everywhere, even if it has zero amplitude at specific places, or even everywhere.
Quote from: Chiral As I understand it, a field needs no source. A field just is. It's a sort of accounting or mapping tool that we can use to describe the universe. Every field exists everywhere, even if it has zero amplitude at specific places, or even everywhere. You are saying, quite specifically, that a field (e.g. the electron field?)
is the pre-existing entity – it needs no source.
If this is so, what meaning does it have to talk of the electron as the source of the field?
The energy of a field exists. Otherwise we wouldn't have any forces. It isn't tangible. That does not mean that it is simply an abstract concept.
Quote from: jeffreyH on 18/02/2018 22:32:55The energy of a field exists. Otherwise we wouldn't have any forces. It isn't tangible. That does not mean that it is simply an abstract concept.the field is not just model and fit for scrap if superseded?
Quote from: geordief on 18/02/2018 23:40:43Quote from: jeffreyH on 18/02/2018 22:32:55The energy of a field exists. Otherwise we wouldn't have any forces. It isn't tangible. That does not mean that it is simply an abstract concept.the field is not just model and fit for scrap if superseded?Probably I'll amaze you now, but did you know that an electrostatic field has a mass too? --lightarrow
The fact it needs a source doesn't mean it can't exists after being generated by it. You switch on a laser device: it generates a light beam; you switch off the device: the light beam keeps going towards its target.
The ancient romans created the Adrian wall; the wall is still there, but the ancient romans don't exists anymore.
Is the field something that exists in its own right, irrespective of whether or not any electron is “active” within it?
Quote from: Bill Is the field something that exists in its own right, irrespective of whether or not any electron is active within it?Im going to attempt an answer to my own question.The term electron field is used in two different ways:1) A field which exists, and has probably existed since the BB, or very soon after. The electron is not the source of this field; it is a quantum of the field.2) An electron is a disturbance in the field described. This disturbance influences the field. That influence is what we identify as a field, of which the electron is the source. Does that make any sense?
Is the field something that exists in its own right, irrespective of whether or not any electron is active within it?
The term “electron field” is used in two different ways:1) A field which exists, and has probably existed since the BB, or very soon after. The electron is not the source of this field; it is a quantum of the field.2) An electron is a disturbance in the field described. This disturbance “influences” the field. That influence is what we identify as a field, of which the electron is the source. Does that make any sense?
I wouldn’t make that distinction. I would say there is an electron field, the electron is a quantum of that field and a disturbance of the field. It isn’t so much that the disturbance influences the field, as that disturbance is what we detect and call an electron. There are other fields which the electron influences such as the electromagnetic field.Does that make sense?
What causes disturbances in the electron field that you say we call electrons when detected ?Does one disturbance cause another?
As @chiralSPO said “It's a sort of accounting or mapping tool that we can use to describe the universe”.
Quote from: opportunity on 17/02/2018 11:08:45 as for instance to resolve Dirac's postulate, Which postulate and what do you mean by resolve?
his postulate was that there must be a sea of negative energy to keep the idea of energy creation at bay. ......yet "here" "purposefully" and as a proven idea anti-particles can annihilate standard elementary particles and thus aim to resolve the Dirac "sea" issue. Of what is being suggested in the context of this topic is that a particle, something substantiative, is directly responsible for the idea of energy and thus a field, whether creation or destruction.