Abstract The nature of the electron remains one of the fundamental puzzles of modern physics. While Quantum Electrodynamics (QED) successfully treats the electron as a point-like particle, the infinite self-energy associated with a point charge presents a persistent theoretical singularity. Recent experimental breakthroughs in attosecond spectroscopy have challenged this paradigm, revealing a coherent, extended charge distribution. In this Letter, we propose that the electron is a toroidal photon soliton stabilized by the non-linear saturation of the vacuum. By applying Born-Infeld electrodynamics calibrated to the Schwinger limit (ES 1. 3 10^18 V/m), we demonstrate that vacuum saturation resolves the mass-charge anomaly of previous toroidal models, allowing the exact elementary charge e to emerge naturally. Furthermore, we show that the experimental fine-structure constant (^-1 137. 036) corresponds to a geometric stability condition—a "topology gap"—between the cylindrical and toroidal limits of the self-confined field. Key Highlights • Resolution of the Charge Anomaly: Solves the persistent 9% charge deficit found in linear toroidal models (0. 91e vs 1. 0e) by accounting for vacuum non-linearity at the femtometer scale. • Geometric Origin of Alpha: Demonstrates that the fine-structure constant (1/137) is not arbitrary, but a geometric necessity required to stabilize a twisted toroidal topology. • The "Hopf" Electron: Visualizes the electron not as a simple ring, but as a Hopf fibration—a twisted soliton that distributes curvature stress evenly across the vacuum. • Aligned with Experiment: Provides a theoretical geometric framework that aligns with recent attosecond visualizations of the electron as an extended wavepacket (Nobel Prize in Physics 2023 context). Methodology This work utilizes semi-classical field theory, specifically integrating the Williamson-van der Mark toroidal geometry with Born-Infeld non-linear electrodynamics. The model is calibrated strictly to the Schwinger Limit (the breakdown voltage of the vacuum) with no other free parameters.
Spencer Lai (Tue,) studied this question.
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