Monday, March 2, 2026

The process of "phase accumulation" in time unexplained by relativistic Higgs Field quantum physics: Shan Gao new paper

 The existence of such formulations raises a profound question: Is the gauge potential
Aμ merely a convenient mathematical tool, or is it a physically real field? The Aharonov-
Bohm (AB) effect famously provides a test case for this question in quantum mechanics
[1]. Gauge-invariant explanations of the AB effect, which attribute the phase shift to the
magnetic flux Φ = ∮ A · dr, are successful in predicting the final outcome. However, as
argued in [4], they fail to explain the process of phase accumulation in the generalized AB effect, where the flux varies in time. This leads to a no-go theorem: any purely gauge-invariant account cannot provide a complete explanation of the effect.

https://www.academia.edu/164907944/The_Gauge_Invariant_Higgs_Mechanism_Is_Incomplete_From_Angular_Momentum_to_Flux_Quantization 

 The incompleteness is not about exotic topological defects—it is about the most basic quantum property of a single particle: its orbital angular momentum. Any formulation that claims to be a complete physical description of the Higgs mechanism must be able to account for the quantization of angular momentum of its own particle excitations. Struyve’s formulation cannot do this without invoking external, global information....The gauge potential Aμ and the phase θ are not mere mathematical redundancies—they carry the global and topological information that makes quantum theory consistent. The next section will show that this problem becomes even more acute when genuine topological defects are considered...

  Struyve’s formulation fails to account for the most basic quantum properties—angular momentum quantization and flux quantization—without external input. It is therefore not a complete physical theory....require an externally imposed quantization condition involving global circulations and magnetic flux to enforce single-valuedness of the fundamental fields and to account for basic quantum properties like angular momentum quantization and flux
quantization. This incompleteness is not limited to exotic topological configurations. It already manifests for a single Higgs boson in a state with orbital angular momentum,

 

 

No comments:

Post a Comment