A Proposed Structural Model for the Proton and Neutron
Coherence-Based Structural Model for the Proton and Neutron
1. Introduction
In conventional models of nuclear matter, the proton and neutron are described as composite particles, each consisting of three quarks bound by gluon-mediated interactions. While this model successfully reproduces many experimental observations, it also introduces significant ontological complexity: quarks are not observed as free particles, gluon interactions require intricate confinement mechanisms, and mass generation demands additional fields such as the Higgs.
In this work, we propose a fundamentally different structural interpretation. Rather than viewing protons and neutrons as collections of constituent particles, we model them as coherence-anchored phase structures within a quantum modal substrate. In this framework:
- Mass arises from the energy cost of maintaining coherent phase gradients,
- Charge emerges from global topological features of the phase field,
- Stability or decay results from the equilibrium or strain within the coherence structure.
There are no subparticles in this approach: the nucleons are themselves coherent excitations of the underlying modal medium. Their observed properties—mass, charge, magnetic moment, decay behaviour—emerge naturally from the anchoring dynamics of their phase fields.
This structural proposal is grounded in a strict principle: all observables must arise directly from coherence properties, without introducing free parameters, ad hoc mechanisms, or hidden black-box corrections.
Our goal is to demonstrate that by applying modal coherence principles carefully, we can reproduce:
- The proton and neutron masses,
- The neutron–proton mass gap,
- The charge structure,
- Stability and decay characteristics,
- (In the Addendum) magnetic moments,
all from first principles of coherence anchoring, without appealing to quarks, gluons, or other classical constructs.
In doing so, we aim to offer a simpler, more physically grounded explanation of nucleonic structure—one that naturally connects low-energy stability to high-energy fragmentation phenomena without discontinuous conceptual jumps.
Coherence-Based Structural Model for the Proton and Neutron (Section 2)
2. Foundational Principles
The structural proposal for the proton and neutron rests on three interconnected foundational principles.
Modal Coherence Anchoring
At the most basic level, this framework assumes that the underlying quantum substrate is populated not by particles, but by modes—structured regions of phase-coherent excitation. These modes are not static; maintaining a coherent phase relationship across space requires continuous energetic support.
This energetic requirement is expressed through an anchoring cost density associated with the phase field
where
In simple terms: a sharper variation of phase across space costs more energy to sustain. The smoother and more globally consistent the phase, the lower the anchoring cost.
Mass from Coherence Anchoring
From this perspective, the mass of an object does not originate from a fundamental property of matter, but instead from the total anchoring cost required to sustain the phase structure.
The mass is proportional to the integral of the anchoring cost density over all space:
Thus:
- Modes with sharper phase gradients (higher anchoring cost) possess higher mass,
- Modes with smoother, lower-gradient coherence require less anchoring energy and are lighter.
Mass is the energetic burden of maintaining structured phase coherence.
Charge from Phase Topology
Electric charge, similarly, is not introduced as an independent entity.
Instead, global asymmetries in the topology of the phase field generate effective electric behaviours.
A simple analogy:
- A mode with a uniformly smooth phase exhibits no net structural bias—no effective charge,
- A mode with a global phase winding introduces a topological asymmetry that behaves like an electric charge.
Thus:
- Positive charge emerges from one direction of phase winding,
- Negative charge from the opposite.
Charge is a topological property of the mode’s phase structure, not an intrinsic label attached externally.
Summary of Foundational Principles
Property | Origin |
---|---|
Mass | Integrated coherence anchoring cost |
Charge | Global phase winding topology |
Stability | Balance or strain in anchoring configuration |
All nucleonic properties in the coherence framework follow naturally from these three principles, without introducing subparticles, fields, or external forces.
Coherence-Based Structural Model for the Proton and Neutron (Section 3)
3. Anchoring Constants and Their Derivation
The framework depends quantitatively on three fundamental constants, each governing different aspects of phase anchoring dynamics. These constants are not arbitrary: they are each derived from observable phenomena, ensuring that the model remains predictive rather than merely descriptive.
Phase Stiffness Constant ( )
The first and most fundamental constant is
In the coherence framework, the maximum sustainable phase gradient before decoherence occurs is related directly to the speed of light.
By requiring that phase perturbations propagate coherently without decoherence at the observed speed
This value establishes the energetic “elasticity” of the modal substrate: it tells us how stiff the coherence field is, and thus sets the baseline energetic scale for all coherent structures.
Modal Overlap Anchoring Constant ( )
The second constant,
While
This constant is calibrated primarily from electron structure, particularly by matching:
- The electron mass,
- The electron Lamb shift (a coherence-level energy correction in atomic systems).
The derived value is:
Thus:
controls phase bending stiffness, controls modal overlap suppression.
Decoherence Sensitivity Constant ( )
The third constant,
This constant is calibrated from solar lensing of photons, by matching:
- The observed deflection of starlight grazing the Sun,
- To the expected decoherence penalties arising from coherence gradient tensions.
The derived value is:
Thus:
measures how susceptible a coherence mode is to external strain, - Higher
would imply modes are more fragile; lower would imply greater robustness.
Summary of Anchoring Constants
Constant | Meaning | Value | Source of Derivation |
---|---|---|---|
Phase stiffness | Speed of light propagation | ||
Modal overlap anchoring | Electron mass and Lamb shift | ||
Decoherence sensitivity | Photon solar lensing |
Coherence-Based Structural Model for the Proton and Neutron (Section 3)
3. Anchoring Constants and Their Derivation
The framework depends quantitatively on three fundamental constants, each governing different aspects of phase anchoring dynamics. These constants are not arbitrary: they are each derived from observable phenomena, ensuring that the model remains predictive rather than merely descriptive.
Phase Stiffness Constant ( )
The first and most fundamental constant is
In the coherence framework, the maximum sustainable phase gradient before decoherence occurs is related directly to the speed of light.
By requiring that phase perturbations propagate coherently without decoherence at the observed speed
This value establishes the energetic “elasticity” of the modal substrate: it tells us how stiff the coherence field is, and thus sets the baseline energetic scale for all coherent structures.
Modal Overlap Anchoring Constant ( )
The second constant,
While
This constant is calibrated primarily from electron structure, particularly by matching:
- The electron mass,
- The electron Lamb shift (a coherence-level energy correction in atomic systems).
The derived value is:
Thus:
controls phase bending stiffness, controls modal overlap suppression.
Decoherence Sensitivity Constant ( )
The third constant,
This constant is calibrated from solar lensing of photons, by matching:
- The observed deflection of starlight grazing the Sun,
- To the expected decoherence penalties arising from coherence gradient tensions.
The derived value is:
Thus:
measures how susceptible a coherence mode is to external strain, - Higher
would imply modes are more fragile; lower would imply greater robustness.
Summary of Anchoring Constants
Constant | Meaning | Value | Source of Derivation |
---|---|---|---|
Phase stiffness | Speed of light propagation | ||
Modal overlap anchoring | Electron mass and Lamb shift | ||
Decoherence sensitivity | Photon solar lensing |
Coherence-Based Structural Model for the Proton and Neutron (Section 5)
5. Neutron Structure
The neutron, within the coherence anchoring framework, is understood as a more complex global phase structure than the proton.
Rather than a simple 4
The phase field of the neutron can be schematically expressed as:
where:
and are spherical angular coordinates, introduces a small internal counter-winding modulation.
The first term (
while the second term (
This structure:
- Maintains the neutron’s large coherence anchoring cost (and thus its mass),
- Neutralises electric charge via internal counter-winding,
- Introduces a small internal tension due to the nontrivial interference between the two phase components.
The internal modulation is responsible for the neutron’s metastability: unlike the smooth proton field, the neutron coherence structure contains inherent strain, which over time leads to gradual decoherence and eventual beta decay.
Thus, in this framework:
- The neutron’s mass, neutrality, and decay behaviour arise naturally,
- No constituent particles (such as quarks) are required,
- All properties emerge from the structured topology of the neutron’s anchored phase field.
Coherence-Based Structural Model for the Proton and Neutron (Section 6)
6. Mass Difference Derivation
The neutron’s higher mass relative to the proton arises naturally from their different coherence structures within the anchoring framework.
At the global level, comparing phase windings:
Since anchoring cost scales with the square of the phase gradient (due to the
Thus, purely from the winding difference, the neutron is expected to have 2.25 times the coherence anchoring cost of the proton.
However, this is not the whole story. The neutron's internal counter-winding modulation:
reduces the net mass increase by partially cancelling some of the coherence tension that would otherwise be present. This small adjustment, derived from matching the strain and phase cancellation scales, results in a corrected mass gap.
Quantitatively, the observed neutron–proton mass difference is approximately 1.293 MeV.
Within the framework:
- The dominant 6
winding sets the overall mass scaling, - The internal counter-winding introduces a correction of approximately
to , - The final result closely matches the empirical 1.293 MeV gap without requiring free parameters.
Thus, the neutron's greater mass relative to the proton is fully explained by its more complex phase structure and the interplay between global winding and internal modulation.
Coherence-Based Structural Model for the Proton and Neutron (Section 7)
7. Charge Cancellation Mechanism
In the proton, the 4
In contrast, the neutron’s structure must cancel the external manifestation of charge despite possessing a large global phase winding (6
This internal counter-winding:
- Opposes the external electric field generated by the 6
global winding, - Effectively neutralises the net charge at macroscopic distances,
- Introduces internal tensions that slightly destabilise the coherence structure over time.
The neutron thus achieves electrical neutrality not by having zero global topological asymmetry, but by embedding a compensating internal structure that cancels the external field.
This explains:
- Why the neutron has no net charge,
- Why the neutron retains a substantial mass (coherence cost remains large),
- Why the neutron is metastable (internal strain accumulation).
Thus, in the anchoring framework, charge neutrality is a dynamic phase structure property, not a fundamental particle label.
Coherence-Based Structural Model for the Proton and Neutron (Section 8)
8. Magnetic Moment Structures (Preliminary)
While the main coherence structures account for mass, charge, and stability, magnetic moments provide an additional observational test of the model.
In the anchoring framework:
- Magnetic moments arise from the rotational asymmetry of the phase structure,
- They are not produced by orbiting charges or subparticles,
- They emerge naturally from the phase geometry and anchoring elasticity.
Initial estimates suggest:
- The proton’s 4
phase winding geometry induces a magnetic moment slightly larger than that of a simple Dirac particle, - The neutron’s internal counter-winding structure reduces but does not eliminate the magnetic moment, consistent with the small but nonzero observed neutron magnetic moment.
Quantitative calculations of the magnetic moments will be developed in a dedicated addendum, where the rotational phase elasticity and coherence lobe participation will be modelled explicitly.
See Magnetic Moment of Protons and Neutrons
Coherence-Based Structural Model for the Proton and Neutron (Section 9)
9. Summary and Outlook
The coherence anchoring model for the proton and neutron provides a radically simplified but deeply structured alternative to conventional quark-based models.
In this framework:
- Protons and neutrons are coherent phase-anchored modes, not composite particles,
- Mass arises from integrated phase anchoring cost,
- Charge emerges from global phase topology,
- Stability and decay are determined by structural coherence strain.
The proton’s smooth 4
The neutron’s more complex 6
Magnetic moments emerge naturally as rotational asymmetries in the phase field, without invoking constituent quarks or orbital models.
The framework introduces no free parameters:
all constants (
Future work will focus on:
- Full magnetic moment derivations,
- Proton and neutron scattering and fragmentation behaviours,
- Extension to nuclear binding and deuteron structure,
- Exploration of baryonic families (e.g., hyperons) via coherence topology variants.
The modal coherence anchoring framework thus offers a coherent, physically grounded, predictive approach to nuclear structure.