The Concept of Electric Charge and the Hypothesis of Magnetic Poles
Robert J. Finkelstein

TL;DR
This paper explores a theoretical framework where particles have dual couplings, electroweak and magnetoweak, suggesting the existence of a high-mass g-phase with particles that are harder to detect, extending the standard model with knot algebra concepts.
Contribution
It introduces a novel two-phase field theory incorporating SLq(2) knot algebra, proposing the existence of a magnetoweak phase with highly massive, g-charged particles.
Findings
g-charged particles are predicted to be much more massive
The g-phase particles are harder to produce or observe
The model aligns with observed lepton and quark charge spectra
Abstract
We examine a generic field theory in which the field particle has two couplings. It is of particular interest when these are the electroweak, e, and the hypothetical magnetoweak, g. The new field operators are obtained by replacing the field operators of the standard model or of similar models by where is an element of the dimensional representation of the SLq(2) algebra, which is also the knot algebra. The field is assumed to exist in two phases distinguished by two values of : and which label the electroweak and magnetoweak phases respectively. We assume that the observed leptons and quarks are composed of e-preons and are in agreement with the observed charge spectrum of leptons and quarks. It is now proposed that there is also a g-phase where g-leptons and g-quarks are…
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