Bulletin of the American Physical Society
92nd Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Section of the APS
Thursday–Saturday, October 23–25, 2025; Festival Conference and Student Center, James Madison University, Harrisonburg, Virginia
Session N04: Particle Astrophysics
10:00 AM–10:36 AM,
Saturday, October 25, 2025
James Madison University
Room: Physics/Chemistry 2212
Chair: Craig Group, University of Virginia
Abstract: N04.00003 : “On the Origin of Strings, Dark Energy, Time, and the Universe”Higgs Boson
10:24 AM–10:36 AM
Presenter:
Ray Eshraghi
(About the Book)
Author:
Ray Eshraghi
(About the Book)
In this book, I have described a new string theory capable of constructing a universe with its mass, energy, physical properties, forces, and processes encompassing those of our universe. A theory that maybe inferred as " The Theory of Everything" in conventional language of physics and hereinafter termed as the "E-theory".
In this presentation, I will introduce the fundamental structure of a string particle which is responsible for mass of all objects in the universe including Dark matter mass. This particle is known in Standard Model of particle physics as Higgs Boson with significant limitations in understanding the nature of this particle imposed by the model itself.
Higgs Boson is a spherical string particle with a mass of about 2x10-23kg and a radius of 2.3x10-20m in open space. It is spin zero in classical terms, meaning that its rotation is perfectly symmetrical with respect to its center axis but comes in two orientations, left and right-handed rotations. In restframe, these two opposite rotations annihilate each other creating mass and the gravitational forces. The dimension and mass of Higgs Boson changes inside the energy field of a mass, from 2.3x10-20m, and 2x10-23kg in open space to 1.61x10-35m, and 2.18x10-8kg at the nucleus of an atom, and singularity of a blackhole. These masses are space-masses which follow E =M2. Higgs Boson appears massless to our universe because its observable mass is about 3.8x10-84kg, about 1046 times lighter than lightest known particle, neutrinos.
We can only detect the product of its decay which then reveals the magnitude of its space-mass as multitude of particles about 129 times that of proton (~ 2x10-25kg), and a mean life of about 2.9×10−22 s. This is the intermediate decay particle detected at CERN and termed Higgs Boson.
We observe the life cycle and movement of this string in the form of a quantum hop, as “Time”. Therefore, “Time” changes inside the energy field of a mass because the dimension of this string changes as described above. Hence “Time” changes everywhere across the universe based on the energy field of local or regional masses throughout the universe.
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