Can a single photon have a temperature?

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Discussion Overview

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.

Discussion Character

  • Debate/contested
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Technical explanation

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants question if temperature can be related to a single photon, suggesting that temperature is a statistical property that applies to ensembles rather than individual particles.
  • Others argue that photons do not possess kinetic energy in the traditional sense, as they have no mass, but they do have momentum and energy related to their frequency.
  • A participant mentions that photons can increase or decrease their frequency when influenced by gravitational fields, raising questions about the nature of energy changes in photons.
  • There is a discussion about the relationship between energy, momentum, and frequency, with some participants suggesting that the energy of a photon can be described by the equation E = pc, while others prefer to avoid labeling this as kinetic energy.
  • One participant introduces the concept of thermal properties of a photon field, suggesting that it can be analyzed similarly to gases and liquids in statistical mechanics.
  • Another participant notes that the apparent temperature of a single photon can be inferred from its energy density in a confined space, despite the complexities involved in measurement and uncertainty.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

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.

Contextual Notes

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.

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?
 
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Photons don't have kinetic energy, just momentum. In particles, kinetic energy is proportional to temperature (and a function of mass).

For light, the frequency corresponds to the temperature that generated it.
 
Russ

Doesn’t a photon increase its frequency by trading potential energy for kinetic energy when it falls into a gravitational field, and loses kinetic energy climbing out?
 
You cannot assign a temperature to one single photon, just as you cannot assign a temperature to one single atom of matter. The statistics of temperature are just that -- statistics. At any given temperature, photons can have a wide range of energies -- as can individual atoms in a gas. By observing a large number of photons (or atoms), one can define a characteristic temperature for the ensemble. The spread of photon energies is described by the blackbody radiation law. For a normal thermal photon source, you can measure the spectrum and match it to the best blackbody spectrum. The temperature of the source is the same as the characteristic temperature of the best-fit blackbody spectrum.

So the photons do not individually have a temperature; but in large numbers you can describe the spectrum by a characteristic temperature.

- Warren
 
for example, the "background" microwave radiation that permeates the universe "has a temperature" of ~2.5K.
( see, for example: http://physics.about.com/library/weekly/aa021403a.htm )

Also, a photon field can be analysed in a Stat Mech way, with the same "thermal" properties (like entropy, pressure, chemical potential etc) as gasses and liquids.
 
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.

I wonder if you agree with Russ Watters that photons have no kinetic energy? Isn't that what determines their frequency?
 
Photons have energy, which is related to their momenta by E = pc. They do not have "kinetic energy" in the normal sense. Kinetic energy refers to energy stored in an object by making it move. You could define kinetic energy as follows: When you slow anobject down until it's stopped [in your frame of reference], the energy released used to be kinetic energy.

However, you can't slow down (or speed up) a photon, so really the concepts of "kinetic energy," "rest mass," and so on are misleading when applied to photons. The only way to slow them down is to destroy them.

Photons have no mass, and therefore no kinetic energy; all they have is momentum.

- Warren
 
Originally posted by chroot
Photons have no mass, and therefore no kinetic energy; all they have is momentum.

Thank you for answering.

So, what sort of energy is it that is increasing/decreasing frequency?
 
Total energy -- not specifically kinetic energy.

- Warren
 
  • #10
Chroot

Doesn’t this represent the kinetic energy of a photon?

pc=hc/wavelength
 
  • #11
I alway think of it like : zero rest mass, times an infinite \gamma => non zero KE and p

Joe
 
  • #12
Originally posted by (Q)
Chroot

Doesn’t this represent the kinetic energy of a photon?

pc=hc/wavelength
We may be descending into semantics -- but I wouldn't call E = pc "kinetic energy." I'd just call it "energy."

- Warren
 
  • #13
A "single" photon confined (with uncertainty of measurement) in a box with a certain volume gives an apparent distribution of many photons characteristic to the dimensions and thermal equilibrium of that box. From its energy volume density (aT4 in vacuum) of photons we assign a temperature.
 

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