• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

What Are Electrons Made Of?

November 29, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

The question of what protons or neutrons are made up of has an apparently simple answer: quarks and gluons. However, when it comes to atoms’ third component, electrons, the answer is not as easy.

That’s because, as far as we know, electrons are fundamental particles. In other words, they have no smaller components. That’s not something that can be absolutely proven, but it’s certainly what the available evidence suggests. This raises the much more difficult question of what is the composition of a fundamental particle, and how does it differ between electrons and others?

Advertisement

The word “atom” comes from the Greek for “unable to be cut”, based on the philosopher Democritus’s reasoning that matter must be composed of something so small it could not be further divided. Twenty-three centuries later, we discovered that the objects we called atoms were not in fact atoms in Democritus’s sense, having at least two, and aside from hydrogen, three, smaller components. 

Once the composition of protons and neutrons was revealed, it was easy to suspect that this was a case of “turtles all the way down”; we would keep discovering smaller and smaller particles that made up each level we discovered. Indeed, some might have considered it arrogant to think they were part of the generation to have discovered the true fundamental particles.

However, electrons have resisted this sort of infinite regression; 125 years after their discovery, there is no sign of anything smaller within them. Attempts to find some component particles involve both smashing electrons against other electrons and seeing if they release anything, and trying to find internal structure at very high energies. Neither approach has revealed anything inside.

In the meantime, we learned that electrons, like everything that small, are both particles and waves.

Advertisement

Some hypothetical component particles have been proposed for electrons, but the physics they rely on doesn’t fit as well with what we see as the Standard Model of Particle Physics. Although the Standard Model is generally thought not to be a complete description of reality, with particles not included within it suspected to exist, the fundamental nature of the electron is not one of the aspects that attracts widespread doubts.

Given how much lighter electrons are than the particles of an atomic nucleus, it’s not so surprising they’re not made up of anything lighter. 

So, if electrons have no smaller particles to compose them, is there some sort of indivisible material from which they are formed, some electronia, perhaps?

This is the point where it becomes hard to visualize (even for people who don’t have aphantasia). Rather than having some type of matter to make them up, physicists describe fundamental particles as an excitation of a field. In a rare effort to assist understanding, in the case of the electron, this is known as the electron field.

Advertisement

Interactions of this field with other fields give electrons their properties. For example, it is the Higgs field that gives particles, including electrons, their mass. 

Describing something as an excitation of a field isn’t a very satisfying answer for non-physicists. Unfortunately, or perhaps fortunately, the universe doesn’t really do things for the sake of our satisfaction, and it’s the best description we have.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. China Evergrande shares slide 6% in early trade
  2. Indonesia’s new carbon tax signals higher power costs amid calls for clarity
  3. Roman Military Camps In Arabia Spotted Using Google Earth, Suggesting Desert Conquest
  4. 380-Million-Year-Old Fanged Fish Found In One Of The World’s Oldest Lakes

Source Link: What Are Electrons Made Of?

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • The Man Who Fell From Space: These Are The Last Words Of Cosmonaut Vladimir Komarov
  • How Long Can A Bird Can Fly Without Landing?
  • Earliest Evidence Of Making Fire Has Been Discovered, X-Rays Of 3I/ATLAS Reveal Signature Unseen In Other Interstellar Objects, And Much More This Week
  • Could This Weirdly Moving Comet Have Been The Real “Star Of Bethlehem”?
  • How Monogamous Are Humans Vs. Other Mammals? Somewhere Between Beavers And Meerkats, Apparently
  • A 4,900-Year-Old Tree Called Prometheus Was Once The World’s Oldest. Then, A Scientist Cut It Down
  • Descartes Thought The Pineal Gland Was “The Seat Of The Soul” – And Some People Still Do
  • Want To Know What The Last 2 Minutes Before Being Swallowed By A Volcanic Eruption Look Like? Now You Can
  • The Three Norths Are Moving On: A Once-In-A-Lifetime Alignment Shifts This Weekend
  • Spectacular Photo Captures Two Rare Atmospheric Phenomena At The Same Time
  • How America’s Aerospace Defense Came To Track Santa Claus For 70 Years
  • 3200 Phaethon: Parent Body Of Geminids Meteor Shower Is One Of The Strangest Objects We Know Of
  • Does Sleeping On A Problem Actually Help? Yes – It’s Science-Approved
  • Scientists Find A “Unique Group” Of Polar Bears Evolving To Survive The Modern World
  • Politics May Have Just Killed Our Chances To See A Tom Cruise Movie Actually Shot In Space
  • Why Is The Head On Beer Often White, When Beer Itself Isn’t?
  • Fabric Painted With Dye Made From Bacteria Could Protect Astronauts From Radiation On Moon
  • There Used To Be 27 Letters In The English Alphabet, Until One Mysteriously Vanished
  • Why You Need To Stop Chucking That “Liquid Gold” Down Your Kitchen Sink
  • Youngest Mammoth Fossils Ever Found Turn Out To Be Whales… 400 Kilometers From The Coast
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version