Electron Structure

First-Generation Lepton | Mass: 0.511 MeV/c² | Charge: -1 e

Bare Structure (No Cage): The electron has a central -eCP (negative electron Conscious Point) with NO cage structure, making it the simplest charged lepton. It features only a polarized eDP cloud (positive poles inward, attracted to the -eCP center) and an orbiting eDP system providing ½ ℏ spin through ZBW (Zitterbewegung) orbital motion. This bare structure explains its light mass (~0.511 MeV/c²) and perfect stability.

Simplest Charged Lepton: Why So Light and Stable?

Like the up quark among quarks, the electron is the lightest and most stable of its family. The absence of cage structures means no decay pathways — the electron is absolutely stable. Leptons use eCPs (electron-type) while quarks use qCPs (quark-type).

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Visibility Controls

Actions

3D Structure View — Drag to rotate

Real-Time Measurements

Central Charge
-eCP (-1e)
Particle Type
Lepton (e-type)
Cage Structure
None (bare)
eDP Cloud
+ poles inward
eDP Orbit
r = 0.50
Cloud Radius
r = 0.80
Mass
0.511 MeV/c²
Spin
½ ℏ
Charge
-1 e (exact)
Stability
Absolutely Stable

Cross-Section

eDP Spin (ZBW)

Charge Structure