Spin and orbit velocity of electron slows down approaching c ?

In summary: And that spin is not simply angular momentum, but a different quantum property. In summary, as an electron's velocity approaches the speed of light, the velocity of its orbit will slow down but its spin may not, as spin is a quantum property and is not literally the electron spinning. This can be seen through experiments such as the Stern-Gerlach experiment, which demonstrates that spin is a quantized property of the electron rather than a result of its physical rotation.
  • #1
Professorv
2
0
Spin and orbit velocity of electron slows down approaching "c"?

If happen a atom to get very close the velocity "c" the time will almost
stop.
What will happen to the velocity of the orbit and spin of a electron? It
will slow down too?
 
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  • #2


Professorv said:
If happen a atom to get very close the velocity "c" the time will almost
stop.
What will happen to the velocity of the orbit and spin of a electron? It
will slow down too?

The velocity of the orbit will slow down, but the spin might not, as spin is a quantum property and is not literally the electron spinning.
 
  • #3


Will it keep the electron?
 
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  • #4


Professorv said:
If happen a atom to get very close the velocity "c" the time will almost
stop.
What will happen to the velocity of the orbit and spin of a electron? It
will slow down too?

It all depends on who's asking, it is relativity after all. From the electron's reference frame everything is peachy. Objects being Lorentz contracted to one observer don't like "feel" lorentz contracted in their own frame. If you're going 0.5c and you double your kinetic energy you THINK you're going 1c but other observers won't agree with you. The electron doesn't know the different, however, from the lab frame the energy levels get shifted, this is the kind of thing which is exploited in laser cooling (doppler cooling
 
  • #5


rorix_bw said:
Will it keep the electron?

Yes, why wouldn't it?
 
  • #6


Professorv said:
If happen a atom to get very close the velocity "c" the time will almost
stop.
What will happen to the velocity of the orbit and spin of a electron? It
will slow down too?

Just to further clarify, if you have a spaceship with a gas pedal and you put the pedal to the metal and keep it there. You constantly accelerate, it's not like you keep accelerating until you hit "c" and then wham brick wall. You are completely oblivious to anything funny going on, you will feel a constant force consistent with your acceleration and it'd only be when you looked out the window at something like a passing planet or spaceship that you'd realize something funny was happening.

By way of example you might look into atmospheric muons, these were some of the first tests of relativity. If a muon is at rest it decays pretty reliable in a pretty short time, however, muons created in the atmosphere were making it much further into the Earth's surface then they should have before decaying based on their lifetimes. But it you take relativity into account you see that their lifetimes are extended by their speed. In their frame they have the same old decay time, in our frame it gets extended much like the twins paradox.

Also, it's not strictly meaningful to talk about the "velocity" of electrons in an orbital. Electron orbitals have no time-dependence, it's a stationary state. They do have momentum though, ah quantum mechanics
 
  • #7


Professorv said:
If happen a atom to get very close the velocity "c" the time will almost
stop.
What will happen to the velocity of the orbit and spin of a electron? It
will slow down too?

Neither the spin nor the electron in it's orbital has anything like what you would normally think of as "velocity". Quantum spin is NOT the particle actually rotating, it is simply a property of the particle, similar to how charge is just a property. Similarly, electrons occupy an "orbital" and aren't actually orbiting the nucleus like a planet orbits a star. For more info you would need to read up on quantum mechanics.
 
  • #9


From the article:

If the particles were classical spinning objects, one would expect the distribution of their spin angular momentum vectors to be random and continuous. Each particle would be deflected by a different amount, producing a smooth distribution on the detector screen. Instead, the particles passing through the Stern-Gerlach apparatus are deflected either up or down by a specific amount. This result indicates that spin angular momentum is quantized (i.e., it can only take on discrete values), so that there is not a continuous distribution of possible angular momenta.

As it says, this experiment demostrates that the spin of electrons is quantized. It can ONLY be one of two values. This is because spin is a property of the electron, not a result of it actually spinning on it's axis.
 
  • #10


Professorv said:
I don't know if i understood this, if spin is not a real spin movement, how this experiment can work with electrons?

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stern–Gerlach_experiment

I don't understand why this suggests that spin is outward angular momentum to you. If anything this would suggest that you get a range of values when passing through an SG apparatus instead of just two discrete branches.
 
  • #11
maverick_starstrider said:
I don't understand why this suggests that spin is outward angular momentum to you. If anything this would suggest that you get a range of values when passing through an SG apparatus instead of just two discrete branches.

But you don't get a range of values, you only get two. Or did I misunderstand your post?
 
  • #12


Drakkith said:
But you don't get a range of values, you only get two. Or did I misunderstand your post?

Yes, you get two, but if your intuition was that spin was simply angular momentum (i.e. the orbital angular momentum) you'd expect a spectrum (if angular momentum is classical) or at least a range (potentially infinite) of discrete values.
 
  • #13


jetwaterluffy said:
Yes, why wouldn't it?

Mistake on my part. I was thinking: if the electron slowed significantly then its orbit would be affected, but I now I realize how stupid I am.
 
  • #14


maverick_starstrider said:
Yes, you get two, but if your intuition was that spin was simply angular momentum (i.e. the orbital angular momentum) you'd expect a spectrum (if angular momentum is classical) or at least a range (potentially infinite) of discrete values.

Of course, which is what the experiment demonstrates, that our intuition is wrong.
 
  • #15


Hi, interesting question. I think that the electron will get still if the atom get c.
This has nothing to do with velocity but time.
I think when approaches the c velocity, the velocity in orbit will be the same, just the time will be dilated so, the orbit would not be affected. If we take from another frame of reference (not the atom itself) moving in a low velocity comparing with c, the electron would still running normally in orbit.
But i think that it will really get still when the atom gets the c velocity, really stopped still in orbit like a snapshot.
This gets more interesting if we think that it is related with the conduction of electricity. The electron needs to change from atom to atom to get a current. If the electron is still in orbit, the material that has this atoms, could not be conduct electricity.
We are talking about transistors, or semi-conductors, metals, etc... If it gets c velocity, the materials that we knows would stop to conduct electricity
 
  • #16


Please correct me if I am wrong but since "spin" is a quantum characteristic and in actual fact the electron, particularly when it is captured in an atom, exhibits its wave function and cannot spin like an object. Therefore, would not the electron, and the atom for that matter, be c impervious? Unless the energy surge of the singularity itself splits the atom, our electron or electrons will continue to do their job of surrounding the nucleus with a nice layered skin of charges. Since the quantum state of the electron on a atom does not make it behave as a particle, why would a charged wave react to the changes in space-time approaching c? As far as I know, there is no spin to change.

We've already stated that the angular momentum is merely a quantum value needed to make the theory work. Why then would the electron react to changes in either time or space unless they are accompanied by sufficient energy to fundamental change the atom the electron is paired with?

Or am I wrong,
Rob
 
  • #17


vlassius said:
Hi, interesting question. I think that the electron will get still if the atom get c.

No atom can ever reach c, nor does the electron work the way you are thinking.

Rob D said:
Please correct me if I am wrong but since "spin" is a quantum characteristic and in actual fact the electron, particularly when it is captured in an atom, exhibits its wave function and cannot spin like an object. Therefore, would not the electron, and the atom for that matter, be c impervious?

As above, it would never reach c.

We've already stated that the angular momentum is merely a quantum value needed to make the theory work. Why then would the electron react to changes in either time or space unless they are accompanied by sufficient energy to fundamental change the atom the electron is paired with?

Or am I wrong,
Rob

Spin is needed to make the theory work just as much as every other property of anything is needed to make any theory work. Everything reacts to changes in spacetime, even atoms and subatomic particles. Muons created from cosmic rays have a very short lifetime and would not be able to be detected here on Earth if it wasn't for the fact that they exhibit time dilation and live long enough in our frame to be detected.
 
  • #18


Drakkith said:
No atom can ever reach c, nor does the electron work the way you are thinking.I am not so sure about anything, we can't trust ether the time rate that we live :-)
You can thing that is a thought experiment, if it could get c velocity...
Can you please elaborate more about "nor does the electron work the way you are thinking" please?
 
  • #19


vlassius said:
I am not so sure about anything, we can't trust ether the time rate that we live :-)
You can thing that is a thought experiment, if it could get c velocity...Besides,

You can, but it's pointless since it isn't possible. You'd have no way to know if it was correct or not.

Can you please elaborate more about "nor does the electron work the way you are thinking" please?

Electrons are not little balls orbiting the nucleus like a planet orbits a star. The details would require an understanding of Quantum Mechanics, so I recommend picking up a book on it instead.
 
  • #20


The physics of today seems a "Frankstein" to me.
Relativity theory gave us really very important informations but it stops before get c velocity.
We have math problems, we really can not know a lot of things.
We can not even calculate the time component when v=c. The equations that we have do not go there.
I hope see something happening in my lifetime, something to turn this "Frankstein" in a beautiful lady.
Besides, we have a very interesting particle that is at c velocity and we know almost nothing about it too (photon).
What is or is not possible, generally only depends of our knowledge (as human race)
 
  • #21


Drakkith said:
As above, it would never reach c.
Of course Professor, I made the mistake of concentrating on my thesis - the stability of the electron wave on it's atom relative to ST- while ignoring the very basic fact that our atom cannot even approach c very closely without a lot of help. "My bad" I think it is...that's right isn't it?

Rob
 
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  • #22


vlassius said:
The physics of today seems a "Frankstein" to me.
Relativity theory gave us really very important informations but it stops before get c velocity.
We have math problems, we really can not know a lot of things.
We can not even calculate the time component when v=c. The equations that we have do not go there.
I hope see something happening in my lifetime, something to turn this "Frankstein" in a beautiful lady.

Our understanding of General Relativity is not based on pure math. The Large Hadron Collider accelerates protons to greater than 99% the speed of light. Just as expected from GR, the faster the protons go, the more energy they need to accelerate. There is an enormous amount of data supporting GR, going back almost a century now. You can choose to believe that it is wrong, but I think the universe has shown us otherwise.

Besides, we have a very interesting particle that is at c velocity and we know almost nothing about it too (photon).
What is or is not possible, generally only depends of our knowledge (as human race)

We know a great deal about photons. They are massless, travel at c in a vacuum, can be polarized, have a spin of 1, and more. And whether something is possible or not doesn't depend solely on our knowledge, but more on whether the physical laws of nature allow it to happen. We aren't just making stuff up as we go. All of our knowledge is due to understanding the way the universe works, understanding what is and isn't possible.
 
  • #23


Drakkith said:
Our understanding of General Relativity is not based on pure math. The Large Hadron Collider accelerates protons to greater than 99% the speed of light. Just as expected from GR, the faster the protons go, the more energy they need to accelerate. There is an enormous amount of data supporting GR, going back almost a century now. You can choose to believe that it is wrong, but I think the universe has shown us otherwise.

I knew that the LHC uses SR, but how does it use GR?
 
  • #24


jetwaterluffy said:
I knew that the LHC uses SR, but how does it use GR?

I believe General Relativity includes Special Relativity. Even if only the aspects from SR are applicable, I think saying that GR explains it is fine. Plus I don't believe SR deals with acceleration, and you have to accelerate the protons.
 

1. How does the spin and orbit velocity of an electron change as it approaches the speed of light?

The spin and orbit velocity of an electron decrease as it approaches the speed of light. This is due to the effects of special relativity, which states that as an object's velocity increases, its mass also increases, causing a decrease in its velocity.

2. Is there a limit to how close an electron can get to the speed of light?

Yes, according to special relativity, the speed of light is the maximum speed that any object can reach. As an electron approaches this speed, its velocity will slow down and eventually reach the speed of light, but it cannot go beyond it.

3. Are there any other factors that can affect an electron's spin and orbit velocity?

Yes, the electron's spin and orbit velocity can also be affected by external forces such as electromagnetic fields or collisions with other particles. These factors can cause changes in the electron's velocity, but they will still be subject to the limitations of special relativity.

4. How does the slowing down of an electron's velocity affect its behavior in an atom?

The slowing down of an electron's velocity can affect its behavior in an atom by changing its energy level. As an electron's velocity decreases, its energy level also decreases, which can cause changes in the atom's overall energy and stability.

5. Can an electron ever reach the speed of light?

No, according to the principles of special relativity, an electron (or any other object with mass) can never reach the speed of light. As an electron approaches this speed, its velocity will continue to decrease and will never reach the speed of light.

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