Photon
Contents
Full Title
A Photon is a quantum of energy typically emitted by one Electron and absorbed by another. (The most common scenario.)
Context
In empty space, the photon moves at c (the speed of light) and its energy and momentum are related by E = p c , where p is the magnitude of the momentum vector p. This derives from the following relativistic relation, with m = 0 :
E2 = p2c2 + m2c4
need to enable displaystyle for this to work
E2 = p2c2 + m2c4
The energy and momentum of a photon depend only on its frequency ν or inversely, its wavelength (λ):
{\displaystyle E=\hbar \,\omega =h\,\nu ={\frac {\,h\,c\,}{\lambda }}}{\displaystyle E=\hbar \,\omega =h\,\nu ={\frac {\,h\,c\,}{\lambda }}} {\displaystyle {\boldsymbol {p}}=\hbar \,{\boldsymbol {k}}~,}{\displaystyle {\boldsymbol {p}}=\hbar \,{\boldsymbol {k}}~,} where k is the wave vector, where
k ≡ |k| = 2π /λ is the wave number, and ω ≡ 2 π ν is the angular frequency, and ħ ≡ h/ 2π is the reduced Planck constant.
Since p points in the direction of the photon's propagation, the magnitude of its momentum is
{\displaystyle p\equiv \left|{\boldsymbol {p}}\right|=\hbar \,k={\frac {\,h\,\nu \,}{c}}={\frac {\,h\,}{\lambda }}~.}{\displaystyle p\equiv \left|{\boldsymbol {p}}\right|=\hbar \,k={\frac {\,h\,\nu \,}{c}}={\frac {\,h\,}{\lambda }}~.}
Photons Travel through Space
Once a photon is emitted, it can be absorbed once, at the end of its “journey.” No interaction “less than an absorption” is possible. It’s either absorbed, ending its existence, or it's not. If it’s not absorbed it doesn’t interact with anything, and there’s no detecting it.
Now, if you release photons one at a time, and there’s no other source of photons, and you detect one at the detector, you can infer that it passed from the source to the detector, but you can’t be 100% sure of that - it could have hit an air molecule along the way, gotten absorbed, and another photon could have gone off in some odd direction, only to be absorbed and replaced by a third photon that happens to go the detector. This would usually be unlikely, but it is a possible sequence of events. So there’s always that slim chance that no photon traversed a particular volume, even if it’s in the “obvious path.”
The emission of light from an excited atom is a symmetrical process which radiates in all directions, to the same extent as a small dipole antenna would radiate. But QM tells us that when we hear a click in a photodetector, it means that the photon has been captured. The wave function which was spreading out spherically has suddenly become localized at a single point. It’s called “collapse of the wave function”. There is no way to say with any certainty what the "path" was followed by the photon from emission to absorption actual was. In some weird sense it "followed" all paths at once.
According to the current formalism light travels through empty space, which has no physical properties, no conductivity. Light is electromagnetism energy/radiation, but energy does not flow without potential differences like electricity doesn’t flow in an open circuit. This was a huge conceptual problem the Wheeler-Feynman absorption theory attempted to address but ran into some major Causality issues.
Some researchers[1] do not assume a constant speed for light, but rather just that the expected speed is the constant value c.
Momentum
Physics literature calls Bosons, including Photons, force carriers. This is misleading. In reality all a photon has been observed to carry (beside phase and energy) is momentum.
Photon Smearing
- Exclusive 𝜋0-production Cross Section Extraction Po-Ju Lin 2020-02-01
How does absorption of virtual photons "smear" a particle?
The electron loses energy/momentum when "emitting the virtual photon" and therefore must be in a "lower orbit" until it reabsorbs said photon. As it is doing so all the time, its average position is nearer to the nucleus. I must say that this is just a pretty picture for experimentalists/laymen who do not understand QFT. Virtual particles are a mathematical concept which describes the effect of what is happening on the quantum level (up to some order), but not the thing itself. In the end there is no easy way to imagine what happens b/c during an interaction the particle picture (asymptotic states) breaks down and the, for us, unintuitive wave nature of the "particles" takes over. The electron field kind of interacts with itself and in doing so produces higher order effects like the one you are thinking about.
The self-energy is valid for any electron (or any particle w/ charge generally). But if the electron isn't bound, we can't observe it as a "lower orbit". So, it happens everywhere. I think it should be observable theoretically in any bound electron, but it is a very small correction (hyperfine structure). I would imagine that for most systems (eg bigger atoms, molecules and solid-state systems) our theoretical predictions are not precise enough (many body problem) for this correction to be measurable. –
Self-energy is only appearing second order in alpha in perturbation theory. At all energies we can achieve, alpha is very small (1/137). At very high energies the effect of the self-energy would become more important.
our calculations/models from which the not yet corrected values come are approximating more things, s.t. the Uncertainty is much bigger than this correction. The hydrogen atom is a two-body problem and analytically solvable. Helium already needs some approximations to be made/numerical calculations to be solved.
Matter
The working assumption of the "big bang" is that in the beginning there was energy, lots of it, but no matter. We know that two photons can collide and product one matter and one anti-matter particle.[2] But now the known universe of matter has no detectable antimatter particles. So, how can it be that our universe consists of matter and not antimatter. Well, if there was any difference in the longevity of matter over antimatter, no matter how small that difference might be, matter would eventually prevail. So that's what must have happened using Occam's razor as the proof.
References
- ↑ M. S. El Naschie, A Unified Newtonian-Relativistic Quantum Resolution of the Supposedly Missing Dark Energy of the Cosmos and the Constancy of the Speed of Light https://doi.org/10.1016/j.physletb.2014.03.020
- ↑ Karen McNulty Walsh, Peter Genzer, Collisions of Light Produce Matter/Antimatter from Pure Energy (2021-06-21) Brookhaven National Laboratory https://www.bnl.gov/newsroom/news.php?a=119023