ponderingturtle
Orthogonal Vector
- Joined
- Jul 11, 2006
- Messages
- 54,545
Yes they're discrete, but it seems to me they could still be volume charges.
Unless there was an amazing experiment I missed, cathode ray experiments only showed the electrons had a charge to mass ratio of some value. Milikan's oil drop experiment then determined the charge, and that allowed calculation of the mass, which they found to be a small part of an atoms mass. But I'm not aware of any experiment that measured a spatial size of electrons. There are semiclassical electron sizes, and I don't think any of them are based on experiment, and I'm not too sure anyone really believed they were true.
It is not about if they are a true point partical or not, it is that regardless if they have some volume or not, it is so small compared to atoms and nucleons that its size can be be safely ignored for these interactions. If it has a radius or not doesn't matter if it is on a totaly different scale than everything else you care about.
So they knew that compared to everything else it did not have a size that was relevent and could be treated as a point particle and get accurate results. That is all physics ever does, it is all about aproximations like this.
Do electrons have a volume? I don't know and I don't have not seen it matter