What is the nature of the medium that carries electromagnetic waves?

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In summary, energy moves when fields oscillate. The photon is not really a particle or a wave, it is both. Things get more complicated when light travels in a medium.
  • #1
bobsmith76
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Here's a question from my textbook. Since there are no calculations I put this in this forum rather than the hmwk forum.

When light (or other electromagnetic radiation) travels across a given region, what is it that oscillates? What is it that is transported?

Here is the answer provided:

Energy moves. No matter moves. You could say that electric and magnetic fields move, but it is nicer to say that the fields stay at that point and oscillate. The fields vary in time, like sports fans in the grandstand when the crowd does the wave. The fields constitute the medium for the wave, and energy moves.

I thought it was the photon that moves. Maybe I'm thinking of the photon as a particle when it's not really a particle but only has particle like properties.
 
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  • #2
Okay. This involves a little quantum physics. I might not be qualified to answer this question, as I only have a basic understanding of it, but here goes.

The photon isn't "really" a particle or a wave. Or it's both. In some experiments, it shows particle-like properties, and in others, it appears to show wave-like ones. (In fact, from observations, in some experiments it acts exactly like a particle and in others, exactly like a wave.) I'd imagine that in this experiment, it would exhibit wave-like properties as opposed to particle-like ones.

This sound confusing? Welcome to Quantum Mechanics.
 
  • #3
bobsmith76 said:
I thought it was the photon that moves. Maybe I'm thinking of the photon as a particle when it's not really a particle but only has particle like properties.

It's a particle, it's just a massless particle.

Whovian's answer is a good description.

Thing to remember is that all words (such as "particle") are approximations and analogies. No amount of words can properly describe anything subatomic. What describes them is the formulae. Words are simply metaphors to help us visualize things. "The photon is like a particle". Like any analogy, it can be carried too far.
 
  • #4
From the "electromagnetic wave" point of view (as opposed to the "photon" point of view) the wave is changes (increases and decreases) in the strength of the electric and magnetic fields (or the "electromagnetic" field), not actual motion of anything.
 
  • #5
All the above sounds good...
electromagnetic waves carry energy in a vacuum...in 'nothing'...there is no background material, no mass,no atoms, no particles, required, just space and time; with sound waves in contrast, energy is also transferred but requires a medium, like air or water or metal...some mass, some particles, to carry the energy.

When light travels in a medium, like glass, things get more complicated...that's another discussion.

Also, it should be noted that while not requiring a material medium, light CAN cause a medium to gain energy...the photoelectric effect is such a situation in which incident light can set orbital electrons into different energy levels...
 

1. What is light?

Light is a form of electromagnetic radiation that is visible to the human eye. It is made up of particles called photons that travel in waves.

2. How does light move?

Light moves at the speed of 299,792,458 meters per second in a vacuum. It can also travel through different mediums, such as air or water, but its speed will vary depending on the medium.

3. What causes light to move?

Light moves because of its energy. As photons travel, they carry energy with them and can transfer this energy to other particles, causing them to move as well.

4. Can light be stopped?

In a vacuum, light cannot be stopped. However, it can be slowed down or absorbed when passing through different mediums, such as glass or water. This is why light appears to bend when passing through a prism or a glass of water.

5. How does light travel through space?

Light travels through space in straight lines, known as rays. This is because there is no medium in space to cause the light to bend or scatter. However, light can still be affected by the gravitational pull of large objects, such as stars or black holes.

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