MyJournals Home  

RSS FeedsEntropy, Vol. 19, Pages 234: The Particle as a Statistical Ensemble of Events in Stueckelberg-Horwitz-Piron Electrodynamics (Entropy)

 
 

19 may 2017 12:46:52

 
Entropy, Vol. 19, Pages 234: The Particle as a Statistical Ensemble of Events in Stueckelberg-Horwitz-Piron Electrodynamics (Entropy)
 


In classical Maxwell electrodynamics, charged particles following deterministic trajectories are described by currents that induce fields, mediating interactions with other particles. Statistical methods are used when needed to treat complex particle and/or field configurations. In Stueckelberg-Horwitz-Piron (SHP) electrodynamics, the classical trajectories are traced out dynamically, through the evolution of a 4D spacetime event x ? ( ? ) as ? grows monotonically. Stueckelberg proposed to formalize the distinction between coordinate time x 0 = c t (measured by laboratory clocks) and chronology ? (the temporal ordering of event occurrence) in order to describe antiparticles and resolve problems of irreversibility such as grandfather paradoxes. Consequently, in SHP theory, the elementary object is not a particle (a 4D curve in spacetime) but rather an event (a single point along the dynamically evolving curve). Following standard deterministic methods in classical relativistic field theory, one is led to Maxwell-like field equations that are ? -dependent and sourced by a current that represents a statistical ensemble of instantaneous events distributed along the trajectory. The width ? of this distribution defines a correlation time for the interactions and a mass spectrum for the photons emitted by particles. As ? becomes very large, the photon mass goes to zero and the field equations become ? -independent Maxwell`s equations. Maxwell theory thus emerges as an equilibrium limit of SHP, in which ? is larger than any other relevant time scale. Thus, statistical mechanics is a fundamental ingredient in SHP electrodynamics, and its insights are required to give meaning to the concept of a particle.


 
113 viewsCategory: Informatics, Physics
 
Entropy, Vol. 19, Pages 232: A Kullback-Leibler View of Maximum Entropy and Maximum Log-Probability Methods (Entropy)
Entropy, Vol. 19, Pages 233: On Linear Coding over Finite Rings and Applications to Computing (Entropy)
 
 
blog comments powered by Disqus


MyJournals.org
The latest issues of all your favorite science journals on one page

Username:
Password:

Register | Retrieve

Search:

Physics


Copyright © 2008 - 2024 Indigonet Services B.V.. Contact: Tim Hulsen. Read here our privacy notice.
Other websites of Indigonet Services B.V.: Nieuws Vacatures News Tweets Nachrichten