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Gravity, Special Relativity, and the Strong Force

by Vayenas, Constantinos G.
Authors: Souentie, Stamatios N.-A.%author. | SpringerLink (Online service) Physical details: XVIII, 144 p. 42 illus., 1 illus. in color. online resource. ISBN: 1461439361 Subject(s): Chemistry. | Chemistry, Physical organic. | Chemistry. | Physical Chemistry. | Atomic, Molecular, Optical and Plasma Physics. | Classical and Quantum Gravitation, Relativity Theory.
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E-Book E-Book AUM Main Library 541 (Browse Shelf) Not for loan

1905-1930: The golden age of physics -- Mass, special relativity and the equivalence principle -- The strong force: From quarks to hadrons and nuclei -- The world of particles and the standard model -- The equivalence principle, special relativity and Newton's gravitational law -- The three and two rotating neutrino models: Particle confinement by gravity -- Energy and other properties of the rotational states -- Gravitational hadronization: How mass can be produced from gravity -- Model comparison with the main experimental features of the strong interaction force -- The Bohr-de Broglie approach in physics: The dual nature of matter -- Gravity at relativistic velocities and dark matter -- Force unification: Is the strong force simply gravity?.

This book shows that the strong interaction forces, which keep hadrons and nuclei together, are relativistic gravitational forces exerted between very small particles in the mass range of neutrinos. First, this book considers the motion of two or three charged particles under the influence of electrostatic and gravitational forces only, which shows that bound states are formed by following the same semi-classical methodology used by Bohr to describe the H atom. This approach is also coupled with Newton’s gravitational law and with Einstein’s special relativity. The results agree with experiments on the masses, binding energies, radii, angular momenta and magnetic moments of hadrons. The model provides the means to rationalize all the main experimental features of the strong force. Some of the implications for the unification of forces and the nature of our micro-cosmos and macro-cosmos are also discussed. The creation of mass itself, in other words, of hadrons from particles as light as neutrinos, can now be modeled in a straightforward manner.

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