New elementary particles as a possible product of a disintegrating symplictic vacuum
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1878124
DOI10.1016/j.chaos.2003.10.022zbMath1057.81573OpenAlexW2096530881MaRDI QIDQ1878124
Publication date: 19 August 2004
Published in: Chaos, Solitons and Fractals (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chaos.2003.10.022
Related Items (12)
Gravitational instanton in Hilbert space and the mass of high energy elementary particles ⋮ How gravitational instanton could solve the mass problem of the standard model of high energy particle physics ⋮ Cantorian small world, Mach's principle, and the universal mass network ⋮ El Naschie's instanton by means of the Schwarzschild's gravitational field ⋮ The concepts of \(E\) infinity: an elementary introduction to the Cantorian-fractal theory of quantum physics ⋮ Fine structure constant, domain walls, and generalized uncertainty principle in the universe ⋮ The symplictic vacuum, exotic quasi particles and gravitational instanton ⋮ El Naschie's coherence on the subquantum medium ⋮ El Naschie's Cantorian space-time and an alternative to the Jakub Czajko issue ⋮ Frostman lemmas for Hausdorff measure and packing measure in a product probability space and their physical application ⋮ Irreversible processes and a new model for the universe ⋮ El Naschie's space-time and gravitational instanton in Weyl-Dirac theory
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Links between physics and set theory.
- A review of \(E\) infinity theory and the mass spectrum of high energy particle physics
- Quantum gravity, Clifford algebras, fuzzy set theory and the fundamental constants of nature
- Anomalous positron peaks and experimental verification of \(\varepsilon^{(\infty)}\) super symmetric grand unifica\-tion
- On the possibility of two new elementary particles with mass equal to \(m(k)=1.80339\) MeV and \(m(\overline{\alpha}_{\text{gs}})=26.180339\) MeV
This page was built for publication: New elementary particles as a possible product of a disintegrating symplictic vacuum