You are viewing a single comment's thread from:

RE: Into The Smallest Dimension

in #science3 years ago (edited)

I tried to find the most relevant figure, so on this page https://physics.stanford.edu/people/faculty I went with Giorgio Gratta.

Hopefully he can get back to me soon, so we can get someone else involved here.
It'd be a good thing to have the verification of you two so that Wikipedia's possibly false articles get corrected.

Sort:  

That's OK.

As a side note, it is not a "me versus Wikipedia" issue and I would like to insist on this. To make it clearer, here is a short list of points that I raised.

  • First Wikipedia contradicts itself and the fact that you give no credit to the "Quarks" page that is very detailed and that contains 100 of references is a bit surprising.

  • Second, I gave you external sources that demonstrate that the Wikipedia pages you referred to are incorrect. Those sources include the Nobel prize website, the particle data group review, etc. I don't understand why you give no credits to them. I assume you didn't even check them otherwise you would have noticed the contradiction with Wikipedia.

  • Finally, you refuse to give credits to hundreds of year of data. The Standard Model of particle physics is more than a mere idea. It is a fact (at least for the bulk of it, a small part is debatable as data leaves room for deviations), and it works. You mentioned several times that this was just an un-tested idea, which is obviously not true.

I am afraid that at this stage there is nothing more I can do. I have tried to provide tools to learn and check the issue by yourself. For some reason, you don't want to do it. Fine. At this point, I only hope G. Gratta will answer you.