Bulletin of the American Physical Society
Fall 2022 Meeting of the APS Division of Nuclear Physics
Volume 67, Number 17
Thursday–Sunday, October 27–30, 2022; Time Zone: Central Daylight Time, USA; New Orleans, Louisiana
Session EK: Nuclear Theory II
10:30 AM–12:18 PM,
Friday, October 28, 2022
Hyatt Regency Hotel
Room: Imperial 5AB
Chair: Amy Nicholson, University of North Carolina
Abstract: EK.00009 : Disruption of the Nuclear Standard Model by the QUEST/RING Theory
12:06 PM–12:18 PM
Presenter:
Claude Massot
(Independent Institute and Scientific Innovation Laboratory)
Authors:
Claude Massot
(Independent Institute and Scientific Innovation Laboratory)
Olivier Massot
(IPHID)
After a century of accompanying intense progress in Nuclear Physics, the Standard Model might be now hampering its future developments, because of several doubtful features: its mathematically over exclusive formalism, an oddly missing strategic basis: the directly measured mass of the ubiquitous neutron and last but not least, the left unanswered, very nature of the neutron.
As a huge direct impact, must be linked an unconvincing basis of nuclear mass defects which could be a potential source for the 60 years of disappointing setbacks in hundreds of world nuclear fusion projects. In 2021 APS/DNP MIT Meeting, a new neutronless, quarkless, gluonless atomic nucleus QUEST/RING model was briefly presented. The new, Quest/Ring nucleus, is based on a cluster of sole protons, surrounded by Rings of orbiting high energy electrons. The early concept of electrons in the nucleus had been abandoned because of the arbitrary choice of a neutron heavier than the proton, based, solely, on energy balances. Following historic drop tower experiments by Gustave Eiffel in his Paris Tower, a new test has been proposed, there, for the neutron. The new vital need for a clean energy source should help opening Nuclear Physics to conceptual competition.
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