How are non-contact forces possible

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In summary, the conversation discusses the concept of matter being influenced by non-matter forces, specifically the four fundamental forces. It is mentioned that these forces are actually mediated by particles, and the idea of virtual particles is also brought up. The discussion also touches on the concept of physical existence and how it relates to the forces. Overall, the conversation highlights the complexities and challenges of understanding these forces and their interactions with matter.
  • #1
Feather17
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My question: how is matter influenced by forces that are non-matter? To elaborate more specifically: the four fundamental forces are non-contact forces, and I do not understand how in a classical reality that this is possible.
Thank you.
 
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  • #2
As far as classical fields go, the fields are not just some kind of background upon which dynamics happens but rather the fields themselves have their own dynamics through their interactions with particles. They carry their own momentum, energy etc. A particle in a field interacts with the field locally (i.e. no action at a distance) and disturbances in the field propagate across the field (bounded above by ##c##) and in effect the field "mediates" forces.
 
  • #3
My answer may just cause more confusion for you, since the interactions between particles and fields leads to some of the most difficult physics (quantum field theory, for example), but hopefully it's a little comforting... Here goes:

Aside from gravity, physicists are fairly convinced that the fundamental forces are actually "mediated" by certain particles. In other words, in order for two charged particles to interact electromagnetically, a photon must be transferred between the two particles. Likewise, for quarks to interact via the strong force, a gluon traveling between the particles "mediates" the exchange of momentum and energy associated with the strong force. For the weak force, the mediating particles are the W and Z bosons. If gravity were like the other forces, then it would be mediated by a graviton (or a few different gravitons, like in higher spin gravity).

So in one way it is legitimate to think of interactions in quantum field theory as always being carried by some particle. But be careful when you think about quantum field theory: sometimes these particles are actually "virtual" particles which have weird properties such as being "off-shell." There are also nonlocal quantum mechanical effects (though they aren't exactly interactions [energy/momentum transfers], but rather correlations) between distant points in space which seem to occur just via the wavefunction, without any transfer of particles to coordinate the measurements at distant points.
 
  • #4
to the OP , by the way don't think of these forces like the EM force as "non-matter" they are matter or part of it I should say. Just because you don't see them with your eyes doesn't mean their not there.
You don't see microwaves , (high frequency em radiation) yet your food and everything that pretty much conducts heats up and feels them pretty fine.Everything that can influence matter is also matter or energy and energy.
Energy and all kinds of forces is a part of space time.So everything you see or don't see is actually physical.
 
  • #5
Crazymechanic said:
Energy and all kinds of forces is a part of space time.So everything you see or don't see is actually physical.
This is a stretch. Classically the 4-potential is not physical; it is simply a mathematical artifact with gauge freedom ##A_{a}\rightarrow A_{a} + \nabla_{a}\varphi## and it is only the electromagnetic field that is physical. In QM this changes because of the AB effect and the 4-potential gets its own primacy but classically what you say is a stretch. In fact, since general relativity is a classical field theory, we can appeal to the gauge freedom of the metric tensor to again argue the existence of unphysical characteristics of quantities which find their way into field equations.
 
  • #6
I like Feynman's answer to this question. Informative and entertaining to listen to.
 
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  • #7
WannabeNewton said:
This is a stretch. Classically the 4-potential is not physical; it is simply a mathematical artifact with gauge freedom ##A_{a}\rightarrow A_{a} + \nabla_{a}\varphi## and it is only the electromagnetic field that is physical. In QM this changes because of the AB effect and the 4-potential gets its own primacy but classically what you say is a stretch. In fact, since general relativity is a classical field theory, we can appeal to the gauge freedom of the metric tensor to again argue the existence of unphysical characteristics of quantities which find their way into field equations.

The way you say this is as though "physical" is a meaningful, technical word. But its not, is it? It not a technical word and thus isn't really meaningful to consider when it comes to science. I think that whether something is physical or not is a matter of taste.
 
  • #8
Feather17 said:
My question: how is matter influenced by forces that are non-matter? To elaborate more specifically: the four fundamental forces are non-contact forces, and I do not understand how in a classical reality that this is possible.
Thank you.

Isn't the whole point of Modern Physics that "Classical Reality" is just a subset of a wider reality? It can hardly be surprising that the Classical approach fails to explain everything. If it did, there would have been no need for QM or Relativity.
 
  • #9
ModusPwnd said:
The way you say this is as though "physical" is a meaningful, technical word. But its not, is it? It not a technical word and thus isn't really meaningful to consider when it comes to science. I think that whether something is physical or not is a matter of taste.

Thanks for this--I agree that crazymechanic's post
Everything that can influence matter is also matter or energy and energy. So everything you see or don't see is actually physical.
is a really naive thing to say. Without delving into the philosophical issues, what you're saying is that everything you see and everything you don't see is physical. Well, what else is there besides things you see and things you don't see? You're saying "Everything with (A) and everything with (not A) has property (B)" which is equivalent to "Everything has property (B)." In your context, (B) is being physical, so you're arguing that everything is physical. Hopefully you've been exposed to some philosophy where they explore the ideas of "existence" vs. "physical existence." (Does mathematics exist physically?)

Anyway, I vote to end this sub-conversation because there are much more relevant things to discuss here.
 
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  • #10
ModusPwnd said:
The way you say this is as though "physical" is a meaningful, technical word. But its not, is it? It not a technical word and thus isn't really meaningful to consider when it comes to science. I think that whether something is physical or not is a matter of taste.
No. Open up any classical electromagnetism text and you will see ##F_{ab}## (i.e. the electromagnetic field) differentiated from ##A_{a}## with regards to the classically primitive existence of ##F_{ab}##. This changes in QM because of the AB effect but this distinction between the two (the 4-potential vs the electromagnetic field) is something every basic electrodynamics text goes into (at least the ones that develop the 4-potential formalism). These distinctions show up when considering things like the initial value formulation of Maxwell's equations and Einstein's equations. This is not a matter of semantics.
 
  • #11
But why do you call that distinction "physical" vs "non-physical"? Do they use the word "physical" in the text? I doubt it, but I would be interested if they did. AFAIK, its a non-scientific word that does not provide any insight.
 
  • #13
hmm, I don't buy it. It looks like they are conflating "observable" with "physical" in that wikipedia. Is the claim that physical and observable are the same? The other wikipedia says "physically observable", but I don't know what that means. What is something that is non-physically observable? I wish they defined "physical". It wreaks of sloppy language to me.
 
  • #14
ModusPwnd said:
hmm, I don't buy it ...

I'm not sure why you think your disapproval is an argument, or is even worth saying.

WBN: According to Newton's 2nd Law, force equals mass times acceleration.

AnTiFreeze3: Nah, I just choose not to accept that. No, I don't have a particular reason for feeling this way, aside from maybe a primitive feeling in my gut that tells me not to trust this, but I do know that I want to voice my dissonance without looking for myself to see if this is true. Additionally, evidence put forth in support of your claim will also not feel right.
 
  • #15
AnTiFreeze3 said:
I'm not sure why you think your disapproval is an argument, or is even worth saying.

Why not? I'm not sure why you think your statement is even worth saying, but you did. I am just trying to explore an idea and maybe learn something. Your comment here is rude and unhelpful. Have anything useful to add besides a naked critique? What is the difference between "observable" and "physical"? Is there a difference? If I replace the word "physical" with "observable" in his link it makes a lot more sense.

Also, I just scanned my griffths text on the 4 potential and EM field like he suggested, I see nothing mentioning it as being physical or not. But if I missed it I would like to know.
 
  • #16
ModusPwnd said:
hmm, I don't buy it. It looks like they are conflating "observable" with "physical" in that wikipedia. Is the claim that physical and observable are the same? The other wikipedia says "physically observable", but I don't know what that means. What is something that is non-physically observable? I wish they defined "physical". It wreaks of sloppy language to me.
Looks like Griffiths: http://postimg.org/image/gd36ejp37/
and Wald: http://postimg.org/image/66ukvk4oz/ like the word too. See here as well: https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=433308
and here: https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=507217
and here: http://physics.stackexchange.com/qu...ial-and-gauge-invariance-in-quantum-mechanics
 
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  • #17
Thanks for the links.

K^2 says this: "In QM, vector potential is physical, but not observable." I like this one because it explicitly differentiates physical from observable. But I don't understand it. What is the difference? I understand what being "not observable" means, but what does being physical, in this context, mean? Otherwise, it looks like physical and observable are completely interchangeable in the other links, doesn't it?

And why does Griffiths call E and B physical? My first thought is that he does so because they are observable (or measurable), but K^2's quote throws a wrench in that logic.

The stack exchange quote says "physical observable". What is a non-physical observable?

They are all confusing to me... What does "this difficulty is not of a physical character." mean? It also says "physically, Maxwell's equations do admit a well posed initial value formulation". Does he mean its observable? Is that why its "physically"?

I think I need a precise technical definition of "physical" otherwise this all just looks like sloppy, historically minded language to me. (from the old days when there was a physical realm and a non-physical realm to consider)

I should probably make my own thread on these questions. (Hopefully AnTiFreeze3 approves...)
 
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  • #18
It is here that the two words seem to have some discrepancy amongst all those different posts i.e. it is here that the lack of a standard definition of "physical" becomes a pain. You can see yourself that some people interchanged the two in those posts quite often whereas K^2 differentiated the two. As far as I can tell, the most obvious difference can be seen by reading the first answer here: http://physics.stackexchange.com/qu...ial-and-gauge-invariance-in-quantum-mechanics and comparing it to the first answer here: http://physics.stackexchange.com/questions/65757/observables-what-are-they

So it has physically observable effects but it is unlike what is described in the second link. However at this point I certainly agree that semantics starts creeping up.
 
  • #19
As WannabeNewton points out, many textbooks use the word "physical", but I don't know of any that actually define it. I think the common definition would be something along the lines of "of or pertaining to physics". So I would tend to call just about everything that you can assign a variable to "physical". But that is just me.
 
  • #20
Feather17 said:
My question: how is matter influenced by forces that are non-matter? To elaborate more specifically: the four fundamental forces are non-contact forces, and I do not understand how in a classical reality that this is possible.
The two classical fields are gravity and EM. They are both clearly non-contact forces, and clearly they exert forces on matter. So you are making some sort of counterfactual assumption.

Perhaps you could explain why you think non-contact forces are impossible. That may help illuminate the wrong assumption.
 
  • #21
ModusPwnd said:
... I should probably make my own thread on these questions. (Hopefully AnTiFreeze3 approves...)

It's sweet that my approval means so much to you. You can go ahead and make that thread :smile:, because I don't mind when someone asks a question, but it does get on my nerves when someone disagrees with evidence without supplying a reason, aside from "nah, it doesn't feel right."

Have a good day.
 
  • #22
At this time the OP has yet to reply and has not been active for nearly 12hrs. He has enough to read. I am locking this, let's give him a chance to catch up.

Feather17 when you return please Report this post and the thread will be reopened.
 
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  • #23
Say Feather17, if you are still with us, even so-called "contact'' forces on objects, like friction and normal forces, are actually electromagnetic forces due to electron interaction at the surfaces. There is no such thing as a fifth fundamental 'contact' force. The objects actually never touch.
 
  • #24
Thanks for replies
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I think reality is far from classical - If I think of it as information, it makes sense to me what energy and forces 'are'. but, I can't understand it in a traditional physics sense, which could very likely be due to a lack of knowledge, and thus the reason for the question.
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It looks like I need to look more into photons role in fields, as I don't understand this well.
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Also, mass influencing space is another example but a little different than what was being discussed. I get how a boweling ball warps a net metaphorically acting as the 'fabric' of space, but I do not understand how matter influences space in actuality.
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There are lots of equations for "how much" something will be influenced, but I keep growing concerened about how it does it.
 
  • #25
Ah but those are the type of "how" questions that are beyond physics and enter into the realm of metaphysics, at least until someone can actually develop a formalism that can codify those "how" questions mathematically. For example we know "how" test particles free fall in curved space-time and "how" mass-energy affects the curvature of space-time in the sense that these "how"s are codified by the geodesic equation and Einstein's equations respectively, but we don't know "how" they do it in the sense that you are asking.
 
  • #26
Feather17 said:
It looks like I need to look more into photons role in fields, as I don't understand this well.
I doubt this will help. If you have some sort of undefined objections to classical fields then I think you will find quantum fields even more objectionable. Particularly since in modern QFT matter is made of fields too.

You really should spend some time thinking about what your objection to the concept of fields stems from.
 
  • #27
Feather17 said:
Thanks for replies
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I think reality is far from classical - If I think of it as information, it makes sense to me what energy and forces 'are'. but, I can't understand it in a traditional physics sense, which could very likely be due to a lack of knowledge, and thus the reason for the question.
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It looks like I need to look more into photons role in fields, as I don't understand this well.
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Also, mass influencing space is another example but a little different than what was being discussed. I get how a boweling ball warps a net metaphorically acting as the 'fabric' of space, but I do not understand how matter influences space in actuality.
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There are lots of equations for "how much" something will be influenced, but I keep growing concerened about how it does it.


That has to be true, firstly because classical doesn't predict anything like 'reality' for most conditions (except in our small corner of experience) and, secondly, because the term 'reality' is actually, pretty meaningless unless it means what one 'feels' as an individual (e.g. that stone just hit me in the face). Afaiac, there is no 'reality', other than a shorthand term for 'what I am comfortable with'.

Not at all surprising because the photons that are involved as force mediators are not like the photons we think of when we consider light entering our eyes.

I doubt that you really do "get" it because that model, when applied to gravity is pretty much as flawed as it could be. There are many threads on PF with strong opinions that the model is pretty useless except to show how a net can be distorted by using another dimension.
 
  • #28
Sophie, I was saying only I understand how a bowling ball makes an actual fabric bend kind of mocking that model. It is comparisons like those of objective causality that wrongly imply the actual cause is also an objective cause.

I disagree Delspam. I don't think its an objection to ask how anything works. Obviously fields and space and matter are all 'something' meaning they have properties, rules, and are consistently influencable. They are all physical in the sense we can interact with them. Fundementally It can be argued they are all the same thing (information).
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My question was directed at tollerable science that is more grounded in the x's and o's, to find any and all objective or classical reasoning that will enable me to have a better understandings. There doesn't appear to be any - but I got a lot of stuff from this that I need to go learn.
 
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  • #29
Feather17 said:
I disagree Delspam. I don't think its an objection to ask how anything works. Obviously fields and space and matter are all 'something' meaning they have properties, rules, and are consistently influencable. They are all physical in the sense we can interact with them. Fundementally It can be argued they are all the same thing (information).
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My question was directed at tollerable science that is more grounded in the x's and o's, to find any and all objective or classical reasoning that will enable me to have a better understandings. There doesn't appear to be any - but I got a lot of stuff from this that I need to go learn.

If, by that, you mean 'to come up with a set of rules that predict what will happen under a limited range of circumstances' then that's fine. I don't believe you can hope for more than that but that is, actually, a very satisfying process ('real Science', and what we do).
The problem in trying to relate it all to classical reasoning is that classical reasoning has been shown to be inadequate - for over a hundred years, to date.
Re "information". I think I can see where you are coming from but I don't think that idea is enough to 'explain' everything. I know that, in thermodynamics, you can get the feeling that the pressure inside a cylinder is all to do with statistics (i.e. involves entropy), which is a bit unsettling.
 
  • #30
Feather17 said:
Sophie, I was saying only I understand how a bowling ball makes an actual fabric bend kind of mocking that model. It is comparisons like those of objective causality that wrongly imply the actual cause is also an objective cause.

Oh - right. So we agree on that one :smile:
 
  • #31
Feather17 said:
I don't think its an objection to ask how anything works. Obviously fields and space and matter are all 'something' meaning they have properties, rules, and are consistently influencable. They are all physical in the sense we can interact with them.
OK, so given that you understand those properties I really don't understand what you are asking. If you understand the idea of fields, then how can you possibly be uncomfortable with the idea of non-contact force?

I just don't get what you are looking for here.
 
  • #32
Feather17 said:
My question: how is matter influenced by forces that are non-matter? To elaborate more specifically: the four fundamental forces are non-contact forces, and I do not understand how in a classical reality that this is possible.
This is not a silly answer: how is matter influenced by contact forces? I don't understand it. What does "contact" mean? What comes "in contact"? Atoms? Ok, and what does "contact between atoms" mean, since the forces between them are electromagnetic and so they act at a certain distance?

"Contact forces" don't exist at all...
 
  • #33
The sheer amount of discussion, confusion, and controversy here is remarkable. I think this goes back to a fundamental issue: the question of "How?" or "Why?" something happens leads to an infinite regress of "How" and "Why" questions: you can always ask more "Why" and "How" questions unless you eventually reach some concept which you can agree on, somewhat like an axiom.

Richard Feynman was once asked a question along the lines of "Explain the attraction between magnets." After hemming and hawing for several minutes, he eventually said something to the effect of "I can't explain the attraction between magnets because I don't understand it in terms of anything else I'm familiar with." The point is that there are some axiomatic things one must understand without regard to other more familiar objects, and it is these axiomatic things on which one bases their understanding of other objects.

In fact, I think that exact Feynman interview touches on a lot of the issues people bring up in this thread, such as how contact forces are actually microscopic electromagnetic forces, etc. Here is a link: http://youtu.be/wMFPe-DwULM [skip abound 6 minutes if you want to avoid the hemming and hawing. But watching it shows that questions like this can be head-scratchers even for a Feynman.]

The question in the video has to do with the attraction between magnets, but I think it applies equally well to the idea of an electromagnetic field.

I think though that my initial answer--there are actually particles mediating the fields--is actually a deep answer, albeit nonclassical. Modern physics says that particles and fields are unified in the same entity (the quantum field), so one can view pretty much anything as both a particle and a field, so there's really no distinction between contact and noncontact forces. [So what DaleSpam said, "Particularly since in modern QFT matter is made of fields too." is just one way of looking at things--one might equally say that the field is made of particles.]
 
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  • #34
That was awsome link. Yes a limit of resources would produce a limit in answers to why questions, such as a subset trying to explain a superset. That limitation should be attempted to be understood and all avaliable why's pursued by science.
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From what I have seen of the evolution of science, is how progress comes from giving up classical (normal human perception) thinking. In Aristotle's day, for example it was thought that once something is thrown - something had to be continually pushing it for an object to continuall move. I think we have advanced some - but the problems are describing the world in normal human perception terms (objective).
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Now that pushing has become fields of spatical distrubution of everywhere pushing, and when ask what they are made of we have to resort to saying..."pushing"
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If we don't have to describe all of science in normal human perception terms, it seems straight forward that 'nothing is really pushing and nothing is really moving, but that it is a perception from a conceptual framework that is apparently objective - which defintely is at the other end of the spectrum from classical thinking.
 

1. How do non-contact forces occur?

Non-contact forces occur when objects interact with each other without physically touching. These forces are caused by the interaction of electric charges, magnetic fields, or gravitational fields between the objects.

2. What is the difference between contact and non-contact forces?

Contact forces occur when two objects are in direct physical contact with each other, while non-contact forces occur when two objects interact without touching. Contact forces include friction, tension, and normal force, while non-contact forces include electromagnetic, magnetic, and gravitational forces.

3. How can non-contact forces act at a distance?

Non-contact forces act at a distance due to the presence of fields. These fields are regions of influence that surround objects with a certain property, such as electric charge, and can exert a force on other objects with the same property.

4. What is the role of particles in non-contact forces?

Particles, such as electrons and protons, play a crucial role in non-contact forces. These particles have electric charge and can create electric fields, which can then interact with other particles and objects that also have electric charge.

5. How are non-contact forces related to the laws of physics?

Non-contact forces are a fundamental part of the laws of physics, specifically the laws of electromagnetism and gravity. These laws describe how particles and objects interact with each other through fields and forces, and are essential for understanding the behavior of the universe.

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