Maybe I'm missing something here, but all this strong, weak and 5th force nonsense...
Couldn't it simply be that the electric field from a single subatomic particle isn't a perfect inverse square law field on the micro-scale especially at a single point in time, but has perturbations. maybe an axis related to spin. And that only as a group and or over time does the field become a smooth inverse square, indeed perhaps "lines of force" actually exist. This up close, packed into a nucleus or another tight cluster (Ken Shoulder electron charge cluster) the repulsion might be overcome. Not another force, just discontinuities in the electric field. Otherwise doesn't Ken Shoulders work point to a 6th force? John On Thu, May 26, 2016 at 8:18 AM, Axil Axil <[email protected]> wrote: > Thanks Russ, a great find. > > A new boson must carry a new force since bosons are force carriers. But I > wonder if this force could be something that comes out of the dirac > equations that has not been seen before experimentally, Maybe this new > particle is carrying the monopole charge? The experimenters should put this > particle in a magnetic field and see how it bends. > > On Wed, May 25, 2016 at 12:02 PM, Russ George <[email protected]> > wrote: > >> Here’s a lead on one of the great mysteries, just how is an electron >> coupled to a neutron as clearly neutrons spit out electrons when they >> decay. >> http://www.nature.com/news/has-a-hungarian-physics-lab-found-a-fifth-force-of-nature-1.19957 >> >> >> >> Of course if ordinary neutrons hold on to ordinary electrons, albeit >> weakly, that could explain more than a few mysteries. >> > >

