Is the matter wave of a photon affected by the presence of an electron?

In summary, the de broglie-bohm interpretation suggests that in a single particle double slit experiment, the photon goes through one of the slits while the matter waves go through both. The empty wave, which is the path without the photon, is usually considered to have no energy or momentum. However, this contradicts some observations, such as the fact that the empty wave can affect the behavior of the photon. The matter wave of a photon can interact with the matter wave of an electron, and there is energy transfer between the field and particle. The meaning and significance of the "empty" wave packets in this interpretation is still being debated. As for how a photon becomes polarized, this is not fully understood in this model.
  • #1
San K
911
1
how empty (or filled) is the empty (matter) wave?

The de broglie-bohm interpretation posits that:

in a single particle double slit experiment,

the photon goes through one of the slits/paths and the matter waves go through both the slits.

the path without the photon and just the matter wave has, for convenience, been labelled as empty wave.

Also it is generally imagined that the empty wave has no energy or momentum. why is that so?

however does this not contradict with some of the below observations:

- the empty wave (travelling the other path) effects the behaviour/path of the photon. Is not some form of energy required to effect the path of the photon?

- the empty wave is blocked by opaque obstacles however it passes through transparent obstacles. if it was just a probability wave, why would it get effected by an opaque object but not a transparent object.

the matter wave passes through the same obstacles that a photon would pass through and gets blocked by the same obstacles that a photon would get blocked by. therefore its properties are similar to that of a photon
off track question (and I have asked this before but the response was weak):

Does the matter wave of a photon interact with the matter wave of an electron?

the above, i guess, must be easy to test experimentally.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #2
First, the empty wave has no energy because it isn't mass. It is only the probability that the mass will exist.
Second, the energy that determines the path is generated by the observation. This is a mechanical aspect of quantum physics that is not known. I think it is created from the electromagnetic field generated by the neurons in our body.
 
  • #3
San K said:
Also it is generally imagined that the empty wave has no energy or momentum. why is that so?
Because the empty wave is not directly observable. If you wished you could ascribe energy and momentum to the empty wave, but these would be unobservable energy and momentum.

San K said:
- the empty wave (travelling the other path) effects the behaviour/path of the photon. Is not some form of energy required to effect the path of the photon?
Not necessarily. This would be required in classical mechanics, but Bohmian mechanics is not classical mechanics.

San K said:
- the empty wave is blocked by opaque obstacles however it passes through transparent obstacles. if it was just a probability wave, why would it get effected by an opaque object but not a transparent object.
In Bohmian mechanics, the wave is certainly much more than a probability wave. It is a pilot wave.

San K said:
Does the matter wave of a photon interact with the matter wave of an electron?
Definitely, yes. This interaction is described by quantum electrodynamics.
 
  • #4
San K said:
- the empty wave (travelling the other path) effects the behaviour/path of the photon. Is not some form of energy required to effect the path of the photon?

- the empty wave is blocked by opaque obstacles however it passes through transparent obstacles. if it was just a probability wave, why would it get effected by an opaque object but not a transparent object.

the matter wave passes through the same obstacles that a photon would pass through and gets blocked by the same obstacles that a photon would get blocked by. therefore its properties are similar to that of a photon

Arguing against Bohm's "active information" hypothesis, Peter J. Riggs (a supporter of Bohmian mechanics) has suggested that there is energy transfer between field and particle that is really one system:
It would seem suitable at this juncture to consider whether we might be looking at this problem from the wrong perspective. The discussion so far has been treating wave field and particle as separate but interacting entities for the purposes of the Third Law (like a charged particle in an external electric field). They are not, of course, separate entities and this needs to be taken into account. Equations 13 and 15 together indicate that the energy exchanges between particle and wave field are related to changes in the shape of the wave field. One part of a quantum system merely responds to changes in another part of the system without this being of a classically expected kind. It must be remembered that what is occurring in the quantum case are changes in a single entity.
Reflections on the deBroglie–Bohm Quantum Potential
http://www.tcm.phy.cam.ac.uk/~mdt26/local_papers/riggs_2008.pdf

A criticism of Rigg's approach can be found here:

The Causal Theory revisited
http://itf.fys.kuleuven.be/~ward/documents/review-riggs.pdf

This an interesting but not very clear quote from Bohm's paper on what happens to the "empty" waves after interaction:
While it is clear that what is automatically called the measurement process has thus been given an overall causal and objective description, one may nevertheless ask what is the meaning of all the "empty" wave packets (i.e., those not containing particles). Those still satisfy Schrödinger’s equation, but are nevertheless permanently inactive, in the sense that they never manifest themselves in the movements of the particles at all. Such packets seem to be floating, almost like wraiths in a strange multi-dimensional world... What do all these “empty” packets signify in the causal interpretation?...As long as the measuring apparatus interacts reversibly with the classical system, channels that are inactive with regard to the particles are still potentially active. But as soon as the irreversible interaction with the registration device takes place, the channels not containing particles are permanently inactive. In the usual language, we would say that the information has been “lost”, but as with the diffusion of ink particles, it has merely ceased to be capable of acting in the manifest domain.
An Ontological basis for the quantum theory
http://www.tcm.phy.cam.ac.uk/~mdt26/local_papers/bohm_hiley_kaloyerou_1986.pdf
 
Last edited:
  • #5
I have a question I am struggling to understand how a photon becomes polarized.In this model what changes when a photon is polarized?
 
  • #6
Demystifier said:
Definitely, yes. This interaction is described by quantum electrodynamics.

thanks Demystifier and Bohm2

separate/aside question:
why/how does the need for non-locality arise in the DBB interpretation?
 
Last edited:
  • #7
derek101 said:
I have a question I am struggling to understand how a photon becomes polarized.In this model what changes when a photon is polarized?
The photon wave function has two components corresponding to two orthogonal polarizations. Both components together determine how the photon will move, so the motion of the photon depends on polarization of the wave function.
 
  • #8
Demystifier said:
Not necessarily. This would be required in classical mechanics, but Bohmian mechanics is not classical mechanics.

on a separate note:
why/how does the need for non-locality arise in the DBB interpretation?
 
Last edited:
  • #9
San K said:
on a separate note:
why/how does the need for non-locality arise in the DBB interpretation?
The velocity of any particle at a given time depends on the positions of all other particles (entangled with the first particle) at the same time.
 
  • #10
Demystifier said:
The velocity of any particle at a given time depends on the positions of all other particles (entangled with the first particle) at the same time.

is DBB assuming that the velocity of the photon/particle is not constant?

classical mechanics would say that speed of light remains constant (in all frames of reference and all mediums)
 
  • #11
San K said:
is DBB assuming that the velocity of the photon/particle is not constant?

classical mechanics would say that speed of light remains constant (in all frames of reference and all mediums)
True, but Bohmian mechanics is not classical mechanics.
 
  • #12
Demystifier said:
True, but Bohmian mechanics is not classical mechanics.

why does Bohmian Mechanics assume that velocity of photon is varying when all the experimental data at any point in time and space throughout the experiment matches exactly with the fact that speed of light is constant.

what (assumption, explanation, bridging of logic) is Bohemian Mechanics trying to prove/achieve by assuming that speed of photon varies?
 
  • #13
San K said:
why does Bohmian Mechanics assume that velocity of photon is varying when all the experimental data at any point in time and space throughout the experiment matches exactly with the fact that speed of light is constant.

what (assumption, explanation, bridging of logic) is Bohemian Mechanics trying to prove/achieve by assuming that speed of photon varies?
What is constant is the propagation-velocity of the front of the photon WAVE. But inside the wave packet, the velocity of the photon POINT-PARTICLE may be different. Moreover, it must be different in order to explain interference fringes in terms of particle trajectories. In fact, a recent weak MEASUREMENT of photon particle trajectories confirmed that average photon particle velocities are not constant, but equal to those predicted by Bohmian mechanics:
https://www.physicsforums.com/blog.php?b=3077
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #14
Demystifier said:
What is constant is the propagation-velocity of the front of the photon WAVE. But inside the wave packet, the velocity of the photon POINT-PARTICLE may be different. Moreover, it must be different in order to explain interference fringes in terms of particle trajectories. In fact, a recent weak MEASUREMENT of photon particle trajectories confirmed that average photon particle velocities are not constant, but equal to those predicted by Bohmian mechanics:
https://www.physicsforums.com/blog.php?b=3077

Good point Demystifier...thanks for clarifying.

Is there a statistical distribution (for the velocities) per the equations under Bohmian framework?
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #15
San K said:
Is there a statistical distribution (for the velocities) per the equations under Bohmian framework?
Of course. See e.g. Eq. (39) in
http://xxx.lanl.gov/abs/quant-ph/0208185 [Found.Phys.Lett. 17 (2004) 363-380]
 

1. How can a wave be empty?

A wave can be considered empty in the sense that it does not physically contain any matter or particles. It is simply a disturbance or oscillation in a medium, such as air or water.

2. Is an empty wave the same as a vacuum?

No, an empty wave and a vacuum are not the same. A vacuum refers to a space completely devoid of any matter, whereas an empty wave still exists within a medium.

3. What is the significance of studying empty waves?

Studying empty waves can help us better understand the properties and behavior of waves in general. It also has practical applications in fields such as acoustics, optics, and seismology.

4. Can an empty wave still transfer energy?

Yes, an empty wave can still transfer energy even though it does not physically contain any matter. This is because the oscillations or disturbances in the medium can still cause movement or vibrations in surrounding objects.

5. Are there different types of empty waves?

Yes, there are different types of empty waves depending on the medium in which they propagate. For example, sound waves are empty waves that travel through air, while ocean waves are empty waves that travel through water.

Similar threads

Replies
18
Views
2K
  • Quantum Physics
2
Replies
36
Views
1K
  • Quantum Physics
3
Replies
81
Views
4K
Replies
8
Views
1K
Replies
78
Views
3K
Replies
2
Views
289
  • Quantum Physics
Replies
18
Views
1K
Replies
16
Views
1K
Replies
14
Views
1K
Back
Top