Paradox
Can a photon be said to have a temperature? I want to know if temperature is still related to kinetic energy in this instance. If so, what determines its kinetic energy?
The discussion centers around whether a single photon can be assigned a temperature and how temperature relates to the properties of photons, particularly in terms of kinetic energy and momentum. Participants explore the implications of temperature in the context of statistical mechanics and blackbody radiation, as well as the nature of energy associated with photons.
Participants generally do not agree on whether a single photon can have a temperature or if it can be associated with kinetic energy. Multiple competing views remain regarding the definitions and implications of energy, momentum, and temperature in the context of photons.
Limitations include the dependence on definitions of temperature and energy, the statistical nature of temperature, and the unresolved nuances in the discussion of kinetic energy as it relates to massless particles like photons.
Originally posted by chroot
So the photons do not individually have a temperature; but in large numbers you can describe the spectrum by a characteristic temperature.
Originally posted by chroot
Photons have no mass, and therefore no kinetic energy; all they have is momentum.
We may be descending into semantics -- but I wouldn't call E = pc "kinetic energy." I'd just call it "energy."Originally posted by (Q)
Chroot
Doesn’t this represent the kinetic energy of a photon?
pc=hc/wavelength