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A Revised Planck Scale?



 
 
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Old November 13th 06, 05:00 PM posted to sci.astro.research
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Default A Revised Planck Scale?

wrote:
wrote:
Parenthetically, the revised Schwarschild radius for the proton is
about 0.8 x 10^-13 cm, which is about equal to the charge radius of the
proton and the revised Planck length.


In that case, the model is pretty much dead. High energy experiments
probe the substructure of the proton down to about three orders of
magnitude smaller than that, and there is absolutely no indication of
anything remotely resembling a horizon.

(The 1990 Nobel Prize in Physics was awarded for the first experiments
in this area. For more recent results, look up, for example, experiments
at HERA, which has a resolution on the order of 10^{-16} cm.)


A Schwarzschild black hole is a very crude approximation to the
fundamental particles that dominate each cosmological scale.
Kerr-Newman black holes are a much better approximation, but I would
not be surprised if major refinements to the K-N models are also
required. People like Paul Wesson have spent decades advocating even
more exotic candidates, such as 5-dimensional soliton-like ultracompact
objects that lack a conventional horizon.

The Discrete Fractal paradigm (
www.amherst.edu/~rloldershaw ) predicts
the approximate size, charge, angular momentum and radii of these
objects. It predicts their mass spectrum quantitatively and uniquely.
I leave it to you astrophysicists to figure out the subtle physics of
these objects, except to emphatically predict that when you come up
with a really good model for these fundamental particles, it will
rigorously and equally apply to the stellar-mass dark matter objects
and protons.

Robert L. Oldershaw
 




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