
TL;DR
This paper explores an alternative perspective on mass in relativistic physics, proposing mechanisms for mass exchange between particles and fields, with potential implications for particle physics and cosmology.
Contribution
It introduces a covariant Hamiltonian framework allowing mass exchange, extending general relativity to include dynamic mass transfer across spacetime.
Findings
Mass exchange mechanisms are theoretically possible.
A covariant Hamiltonian approach models mass dynamics.
Implications for particle physics and cosmology are discussed.
Abstract
The Standard Model (SM) ascribes the observed mass of elementary particles to an effective interaction between basis states defined without mass terms and a scalar potential associated with the Higgs boson. In the relativistic field theory that underlies the SM, mass itself, understood as the Lorentz-invariant squared 4-momentum of a particle or field, is fixed a priori, imposing a constraint on possible momentum states. Stueckelberg introduced an alternative approach, positing antiparticles as particles evolving backward in time, thus relaxing the mass shell constraint for individual particles. Further work by Piron and Horwitz established a covariant Hamiltonian mechanics on an unconstrained 8D phase space, leading to a gauge field theory that mediates the exchange of mass between particles, while the total mass of particles and fields remains conserved. In a recently developed…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Mechanics and Applications · Relativity and Gravitational Theory · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories
