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is any energy required to change the spin of a photon? |
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| Jun8-12, 12:27 AM | #1 |
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is any energy required to change the spin of a photon?
Which of the following require energy?
- change the spin of photon - entangle photons - disentangle photons - change the phase of a photon - change the wavelength/frequency of a photon - cause a delay in path of a photon (by each of the various methods) - change the direction of a photon (reflection/transmission) |
| Jun8-12, 10:44 AM | #2 |
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What do you mean by "require energy"?
As in "add additional energy (or get some energy out)"? Changing the frequency does, changing the direction depends on the system (if no wavelength shift is involved, no energy is required. The other operations do not add or remove energy. As in "have some way to exchange energy with the photon"? In this case, what exactly do you mean? |
| Jun8-12, 12:40 PM | #3 |
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Let's, say a ball is spinning clockwise in the direction of its motion....to change it's spin... energy would be required. Now the spin of a ball is not same (even conceptually) as that of a photon/electron. I mean any of the following: - would a photon lose energy whenever its spin changes? - to change the spin of a photon would energy have to be supplied from external source? essentially I am asking.....is there any energy involved (input, output, absorbed, emitted) in the events I listed in the first post. i.e. is there any energy transaction when the spin of a photon changes? |
| Jun8-12, 01:06 PM | #4 |
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Mentor
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is any energy required to change the spin of a photon? |
| Jun8-12, 01:18 PM | #5 |
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Every change requires energy, even the change of the changing.
"Energy" is what we call "that which is required to cause change". |
| Jun8-12, 03:42 PM | #6 |
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Sank: Interesting question[s]!!! Hope some expets chime in here. [Better yet, hope some disagree...that's when good insight develops!!!]
I'll pick a few: But I can observe distant photons at different velocities [or elapsed times] in different curved spacetimes, Shapiro effect: With Shapiro delay, I believe the electromagnetic field retains it's energy [frequency] but I am not positive.... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reflect...ction_of_light |
| Jun8-12, 05:17 PM | #7 |
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Eh? Changing the spin of a photon? I have the feeling to have missed something here: photon's spin is fixed to ONE by quantum field theory, when performing the second quantization of the electromagnetic field, so how damn can you change the spin of a photon???
Is there any reliable reference about it??? I am very very surprised. :s
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| Jun8-12, 06:04 PM | #8 |
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| Jun8-12, 06:48 PM | #9 |
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The system energy does not necessarily change when the spin orientation is changed, so theoretically it does not require energy, but it really depends on what system you restrict yourself to. If I build an experimental device to control such things it probably needs some power.
If you are polarizing light, it can be done passively, but some light will be absorbed so the ensemble of photons will lose some energy even if the individual photons may be polarized without any energy change. I would guess, but do not know, that there is a similar passive mechanism for spin for some particles. |
| Jun8-12, 07:14 PM | #10 |
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I'm afraid to say that "direction of the spin" has no real meaning either. Remember that spin considered as an "intrinsic angular momentum" is only an analogy. That analogy works okay with spin zero particles, but crashes down with spin 1/2 particles. The fact that individual photon have spin 1 (and only one) is a very strong constrained result that arise from at least three different ways in quantum field theory. A typical route to find out what is the spin of the theory, is to set up the Casimir operator, and to deduce the spin itself, by a simple application of Shur's lemma. The quantities deduced are invariant, and this includes the spin, hence the spin is a fixed property for each type of particle described. This is why i don't understand at all how we can get a zero spin for a photon, unless if it is a mistake of understanding from the original poster. Now, combinations of photons can have a spin zero as total spin of the system, assuming their individual spin is opposite ("opposite direction", if I use your words), but I am not too sure that it's what he was talking about. |
| Jun9-12, 12:24 AM | #11 |
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Great answers in the above/earlier posts by some very knowledgeable folks. thanks all.
Now to pick a particular thread - the question is - can we --- create/copy/put/mount, transmit, read --- information without energy transfer/loss? we know its not possible in classical mechanics, however is it possible in quantum mechanics? would this not reduce entropy? and hence does this not conflict with the second law of thermodynamics? we know it works for polarization, but we are not sure if it works for spin. let's forget the spin for now and focus on polarization. It would mean we can create and send information without any energy input/loss/transfer. This is not possible in classical mechanics, however it seems it may be possible in quantum mechanics. does any change require change/transfer of energy? So as James puts it -- On a separate note, there's a bit vague question (because our understanding of Quantum entanglement is limited for now) Does quantum entanglement somehow escape the energy transfer/balancing happening in quantum entanglement (at the time of measurement/definiteness)? |
| Jun9-12, 12:50 AM | #12 |
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| Jun14-12, 03:23 PM | #13 |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Landauer_Principle About all I remember about manipulating 'information' (bits) is that only erasure costs energy...that means it increases entropy...so when entropy increases information decreases....and thats universal. |
| Jun14-12, 03:33 PM | #14 |
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I just skimmed the posts and noticed one of my own:
in general relativity [curved spacetime] is rather ambuiguous...that is, subject to observer dependicies. Here is a discussion still underway...that may interest you.....and there are many others I have seen in these forums: No redshift in a freely falling frame http://www.physicsforums.com/showthr...=1#post3956595 |
| Jun14-12, 09:02 PM | #15 |
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I was unaware of that principle and was coming from a different path......related to causality violation and quantum entanglement. Will go through the red-shift discussion, its interesting. |
| Jun24-12, 04:05 PM | #16 |
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