No, I like where you're going with this. What I was saying was that Higgs particles have a probability of being anywhere just like any other particle, and it is not impossible for an area in space to temporarily not have any there. In this case, anything with mass would not exhibit that mass. And something without mass would not be affected by the rules of even classical physics--gravity included.
I also like the idea of an anti-Higgs boson. Is this possible? If so, an entity consisting of anti-Higgs particles would not only not need to exhibit mass, but would erase the Higgs field around it and create energy at the same time, right? Like when an electron and positron come into contact with each other.
I should state that I don't believe in a God that manipulates the universe, which is why I am trying to explain these anomalies of science.
Also, for the record, I haven't taken a physics course beyond high school, but am interested in it enough to teach myself, so some of my knowledge could be wrong.
__________________
War doesn't decide who's right, only who's left.
-Mark Twain
Last edited by skullfunk; 04-07-2004 at 02:32 PM..
|