Photon Size: Direction & Probability

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In summary, photons go in all directions, but there is a probability you can find it in any direction.
  • #106
ZapperZ said:
<ZapperZ bangs his head into the wall and cries>

Zz.

A valiant attempt at clarity in a thread full of obfuscation.

Fools rush in though so with that in mind :smile:

I really do think the onus is on the nay sayers to come up with something better than they have. AFAIK and admittedly I am very far from being an authority, there is neither experimental evidence or mathematical formalism that requires a size or a mass of a photon or a volume, so to be frank this discussion is completely semantic; even if by some chance someone has tried to state such a thing, I'd like to see it referenced in any scientific papers or given acknowledgment by the physics community generally. Genuinely, the links I've seen so far are far from mainstream and appear to be talking about something other than a distinct mass or size. That's before you look at the deep misunderstandings I think some people have here.
 
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  • #107
don't cry

I was just wondering if they (the ones you cited) were 'your' standard references, or everyone's?
 
  • #108
ZapperZ said:
this is how you CLOUD everything! You have done this before in the Accelerator thread

Anonym: “What is the minimum charge of the bunch available?”

Anonym:” Zz, may you respect me also through your comment on “HUP and Particle Accelerators”?

What is cloudy here?

Accusing you in anything? Do you have Standard References on that?


ZapperZ said:
<ZapperZ bangs his head into the wall and cries>

Zz.

Zz, we love you! Honestly.

Regards, Dany.
 
  • #109
rewebster said:
don't cry

I was just wondering if they (the ones you cited) were 'your' standard references, or everyone's?

He'd be a pretty shoddy practicing physicist if he used non-standard references wouldn't he?

Anonym said:
Anonym: “What is the minimum charge of the bunch available?”

Anonym:” Zz, may you respect me also through your comment on “HUP and Particle Accelerators”?

What is cloudy here?

Accusing you in anything? Do you have Standard References on that?
Why don't you talk about that in the other thread, rather than derail this one any further?
 
  • #110
cristo said:
He'd be a pretty shoddy practicing physicist if he used non-standard references wouldn't he?


I wasn't asking if he used non-standard references
 
  • #111
rewebster said:
I wasn't asking if he used non-standard references

Well, one of us clearly doesn't understand the meaning of the word "standard." Never mind, we'll leave this here-- just go and look up the sources Zz gives if you want standard references.
 
  • #112
jtbell said:
For a properly normalized wave function, [itex]|\psi|^2[/itex] is the probability per unit volume, whereas [itex]r^2|\psi|^2[/itex] basically gives you the probability per unit radius. I personally consider [itex]|\psi|^2[/itex] to be more appropriate in this context. Note that if we (hypothetically) have a [itex]|\psi|^2[/itex] which is uniform everywhere inside a sphere (that is, the particle is equally likely to be found anywhere inside the sphere), then [itex]r^2|\psi|^2[/itex] increases as [itex]r^2[/itex], to a maximum at the surface of the sphere.

Nevertheless, granting that you prefer [itex]r^2|\psi|^2[/itex], let's evaluate your criterion for the ground state of hydrogen. I haven't found a way to do it algebraically, so I simply made a graph of [itex]r^2 e^{-2r/a_0}[/itex]. The maximum is at [itex]r = a_0[/itex]. Going inwards, I reach 0.1 of this maximum at about [itex]r = 0.013a_0[/itex], and going outwards, I reach the same value at about [itex]r = 3.4a_0[/itex]. That's a bigger range of r than my original calculation using [itex]|\psi|^2[/itex]! :eek:

Ok, i have just said an idea for the size of the photon, i have never said enything about the electron. But i am glad that you can respond propely, and not telling me silly things, and stupid things, like anonym.
 
  • #113
Schrodinger's Dog said:
A valiant attempt at clarity in a thread full of obfuscation.

Fools rush in though so with that in mind :smile:

I really do think the onus is on the nay sayers to come up with something better than they have. AFAIK and admittedly I am very far from being an authority, there is neither experimental evidence or mathematical formalism that requires a size or a mass of a photon or a volume, so to be frank this discussion is completely semantic; even if by some chance someone has tried to state such a thing, I'd like to see it referenced in any scientific papers or given acknowledgment by the physics community generally. Genuinely, the links I've seen so far are far from mainstream and appear to be talking about something other than a distinct mass or size. That's before you look at the deep misunderstandings I think some people have here.

However, you can't compare, in my opinion, mass and size of a photon, not only because they are different concepts, but also because we know what is a particle's mass, and we have a way to put experimental limits on a photon's mass (there is such an experimental limit), while there isn't a generally accepted definition of photon's size.
 
  • #114
cristo said:
Well, one of us clearly doesn't understand the meaning of the word "standard." Never mind, we'll leave this here-- just go and look up the sources Zz gives if you want standard references.

well, maybe you can help me then

can you point me to a web page that lists all the standard references?--just the correct/accepted ones
 
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  • #115
ZapperZ said:
Please provide EXACT reference! This means (i) name of author (ii) name of journal (iii) volume number (iv) page number (v) date of publication. This is the MINIMUM set of information in making references to ANY journal publication. You haven't done that. It makes all this, including all those citation numbers meaningless. I mean, do you know what those numbers in brackets mean?

I've mentioned this SEVERAL times already. I don't know what else I can do to make you sit up and take notice of this. My guess is, you are not familiar with peer-reviewed publications, and are not aware of the citation format that are commonly used. Please be familiar with that quickly. It is getting exasperating trying to get information out of you.

You also haven't address the issue that if what you claim is so well-established, why isn't it listed as a definition in standard references such as the PDG book?

Zz.

Zz, if you have any claim that rejects my post #89 describtions, you can mention it. There is no force to mention it surely. But if can not answer that, Please do not repeat your demand to introduse standard references. Because the famous physicists could not find even a little error in my explained method for Reissig's claim "A photon has size". Besides, as I said, in the PDG I did not any claim to prove you are correct. It's obvious. Since I do know it a VALID AND RELIABLE REFERENCE.

Thanks.
Mr Beh
 
  • #116
Proof.Beh said:
Zz, if you have any claim that rejects my post #89 describtions, you can mention it. There is no force to mention it surely. But if can not answer that, Please do not repeat your demand to introduse standard references. Because the famous physicists could not find even a little error in my explained method for Reissig's claim "A photon has size". Besides, as I said, in the PDG I did not any claim to prove you are correct. It's obvious. Since I do know it a VALID AND RELIABLE REFERENCE.

Thanks.
Mr Beh

Unlike you, I never decide on the validity of anything based simply on ONE paragraph of a paper, or based on someone's interpretation of it. I want to read the whole paper! If this is how you arrive at your decisions, then you have your own set of issues that I do not wish to solve.

You have not provided a valid reference. You have provide some 'title' of something (I don't even know if it is a paper, or some crackpot website). You have failed to provide an exact citation that I can look up. And I'm NOT asking for "standard references", because it is obvious that you are not using those. I'm asking for what peer-reviewed or valid references that you are using to BASE your assertion. You seem to have a lot of problems in doing that.

Please note what is normally required in doing a citation. This is NOT my preference, but it is what is required in practically ALL journal references so that someone else can find it and read it for him/herself. This is the information that you have omitted, be it intentionally or not.

And oh, please note that I really didn't come into this thread to carry a discussion with you on the validity of the concept of the size of a photon. It is difficult to carry a discussion with you because it is hard to understand your posts, and I suspect that you have the same difficulty in understand my posts. I'm guessing that is why you seem to have so many level of misunderstanding. So having a discussion is futile.

Zz.
 
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  • #117
lightarrow said:
However, you can't compare, in my opinion, mass and size of a photon, not only because they are different concepts, but also because we know what is a particle's mass, and we have a way to put experimental limits on a photon's mass (there is such an experimental limit), while there isn't a generally accepted definition of photon's size.

That would be the reason for the use of or.

I will say though I believe mass and size have an inextricable link at least in common parlance. Unless you know of objects without mass who have a size in terms of matter, or say if we could freeze a photon in time somehow, where we could show a width length breadth to the wavelength. No one would be idiotic enough to suggest an object with mass has no material size, however the converse appears to be easily argued :smile:

I'm willing to be shown an experiment which shows the mass of a photon, and then discuss it's size, it could happen one day, but until then I think the idea of a point particle seems much more sensible than trying to mess around with hypotheticals in equations. Perhaps that's just me?
 
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  • #118
Schrodinger's Dog said:
I will say though I believe mass and size have an inextricable link at least in common parlance. Unless you know of objects without mass who have a size in terms of matter, or say if we could freeze a photon in time somehow, where we could show a width length breadth to the wavelength.

Can you warrant that there is no mass for a photon? If warrant, please justify your claim.

Thanks.
Mr Beh
 
  • #119
Proof.Beh said:
Can you warrant that there is no mass for a photon? If warrant, please justify your claim.

Thanks.
Mr Beh

No but then you know that, all I can say is that we have no idea and that current science has no need for a size. To be frank if a photon had an unimaginably small mass, it would make virtually no difference anyway, it's not like the whole of relativity would collapse because a photons size was 1x10-47m

since we have no way of determining it's size or even if it has one due to our methods of detection not being that precise, the question as I said is a matter of semantics and mathematical postulation, ie of no real practical use to science as it stands atm.

If you want me to prove that something does not exist, then you want the philosophy side of the forum, because science can't do that.

While your at it ask what is a photons size, since that's pretty much a philosophical question atm anyway :smile:
 
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  • #120
Schrodinger's Dog said:
No but then you know that, all I can say is that we have no idea and that current science has no need for a size. To be frank if a photon had an unimaginably small mass, it would make virtually no difference anyway, it's not like the whole of relativity would collapse because a photons size was 1x10-47m

since we have no way of determining it's size or even if it has one due to our methods of detection not being that precise, the question as I said is a matter of semantics and mathematical postulation, ie of no real practical use to science as it stands atm.
If you want me to prove that something does not exist, then you want the philosophy side of the forum, because science can't do that.

While your at it ask what is a photons size, since that's pretty much a philosophical question atm anyway :smile:


good post--

-and to me, what you're saying (in bold type), is that thinking about the 'size of the photon' is like thinking about 'string/MWI theory'.
 
  • #121
Schrodinger's Dog said:
No but then you know that, all I can say is that we have no idea and that current science has no need for a size. To be frank if a photon had an unimaginably small mass, it would make virtually no difference anyway, it's not like the whole of relativity would collapse because a photons size was 1x10-47m

since we have no way of determining it's size or even if it has one due to our methods of detection not being that precise, the question as I said is a matter of semantics and mathematical postulation, ie of no real practical use to science as it stands atm.

If you want me to prove that something does not exist, then you want the philosophy side of the forum, because science can't do that.

While your at it ask what is a photons size, since that's pretty much a philosophical question atm anyway :smile:
Do you know those experments about "freezing light"? If (I'm confident of it) they will be able to store "pieces" of "frozen light" as it seems, how would you negate the problem of having a finite dimensions wave packet of light inside a given matrix? That wave packet will have to be made of some photons!
 
  • #122
lightarrow said:
Do you know those experments about "freezing light"? If (I'm confident of it) they will be able to store "pieces" of "frozen light" as it seems, how would you negate the problem of having a finite dimensions wave packet of light inside a given matrix? That wave packet will have to be made of some photons!

Light never propogates at less than c, all "frozen light" is, is when the emission and reabsorption of light in a materials matrix, is sufficient to cause the light's speed in terms of distance over time to slow to a virtual stand still, the photons are not motionless or frozen. The photons themselves are never traveling at less than light speed in this medium or any other medium for that matter.

I'm not sure how this indicates size at all, if I'm understanding the experiments, the light has merely been stopped by absorption in the atoms, thus it is not some photons but merely a more energetic structure that has yet emit those photons or the energy ie the light has been impeded from it's usual free movement in a vacuum to some extent by some sort of sodium atom condensates structure at extremely low temperatures.
 
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  • #123
Schrodinger's Dog said:
Light never propogates at less than c,all "frozen light" is, is when the emission and reabsorption of light in a materials matrix, is sufficient to cause the light's speed in terms of distance over time to slow to a virtual stand still, the photons are not motionless or frozen. The photons themselves are never traveling at less than light speed in this medium or any other medium for that matter.

No, you are wrong. Please reffer to this article that see the speed of light by using Bose-Einstein Condensation will reduce.

http://cua.mit.edu/ketterle_group/Popular_papers/Physics%20Today%20v2.pdf

Abstract of that:
Condensates can be a highly nonlinear media not only for matter waves, but also for light. This was dramatically demonstrated recently by Lene Hau and collaborators at the Rowland institute in Cambridge, when they slowed the speed of light to 17 m/s using thecondensate as a dense cold medium. Ultimately, atom lasers may replace conventional atomic beams in applications like precision measurements of fundamental constants, tests of fundamental symmetries, atom optics (in particular, atom interferometry and atom holography) and precise deposition of atoms.

Thanks.
Mr Beh
 
  • #124
https://www.physicsforums.com/showpost.php?p=899393&postcount=4

You could of course read the FAQ, section of this forum to find out why that notion is wrong.

I said photons never propagate at less than c, I am correct in this assertion. Note I specifically said it can be slowed in terms of distance/time but when a photon is propagating it's speed is always c.

Light is slowed by absorption, rapid emission and reabsorption and emission through the lattice structure of a solid, but it is not slowed in the sense that the photons are propagating more slowly than c, they never do this.

Notice they only say it is slowed to 17m/s, this is distance over time, it is not indicating the actual speed of a photon at any given time (t), just it's speed through a solid in terms of the overall speed, this is where the confusion lies.
 
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  • #125
Schrodinger's Dog said:
https://www.physicsforums.com/showpost.php?p=899393&postcount=4

You could of course read the FAQ, section of this forum to find out why that notion is wrong.

I said photons never propagate at less than c, I am correct in this assertion. Note I specifically said it can be slowed in terms of distance/time but when a photon is propagating it's speed is always c.

Light is slowed by an emission and reabsorption but it is not slowed in the sense that the photons are moving more slowly than c, they never do this.

Just a question: if speed of light slows, then why speed of photons don't slow? If a light ray is created by accumulation of photons that they are propagating, how it occurs that speed of light can slow, but the photons no?
What is your meaning of "terms of distance/time"?
Of course, perhaps I'm wrong.

Thanks.
Mr Beh
 
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  • #126
Proof.Beh said:
Just a question: if speed of light slows, then why speed of photons don't slow? If a light ray is created by accumulation of photons that they are propagating, how it occurs that speed of light can slow, but the photons no?
What is your meaning of "terms of distance/time"?
Of course, perhaps I'm wrong.

Thanks.
Mr Beh

I know it sounds very odd, but you have to consider that the photon is being absorbed by the lattice structure of a solid and then quickly re-emitted but not without delay, this is where the actual delay occurs, when it is not propagating. When a photon leaves the lattice structure it propagates at c until it meets another part of the structure then it is delayed again by absorption and re-emission until it finally leaves the medium.

At no point in a solid has a photon ever propagated at less than c, it has merely been impeded by the constant absorption and re-emission in the lattice. In a vacuum it has no real impedance and so it's simply propagates at c. this why we say the speed of light in a vacuum is c, but we don't mean the speed of propagation of a photon is ever less than c.
 
  • #127
Good post for Schrodinger's Dog, In other words For scattering processes, the photon takes a path that is a longer distance than the metric displacement along its trajectory. As the photon is scattered, it follows a circuitous path which is constantly changing direction but on average is propagating in a straight-line direction. We derive by using it your conclusion.

Thank you
Mr Beh
 
  • #128
Proof.Beh said:
The photon takes a path that is a longer distance than the metric displacement along its trajectory.

When did you EVER read anything about the trajectory in Schrödinger Dog's (CORRECT) explanations as to why photons "seem to solw down when passing through a medium" ?

Could you pinpoint that out to me, please. Btw, if you still have the time, i am still waiting for some answers to my questions. But i guess you will chose the easy way out and just ignore my posts :rofl:

marlon
 
  • #129
Proof.Beh said:
We derive by using it your conclusion.

What exactly are you "deriving" here? All you're doing is taking a simple statement and making it more complicated than it needs to be.
 
  • #130
Schrodinger's Dog said:
I know it sounds very odd, but you have to consider that the photon is being absorbed by the lattice structure of a solid and then quickly re-emitted but not without delay
But in the very FAQ section, ZapperZ explained very well that this is not the case, actually: there isn't any "photon absorption and subsequent photon re-emission", at least in a solide lattice. Or you intended something different?

From the FAQ: "Do Photons Move Slower in a Solid Medium?"
https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=104715
A common explanation that has been provided is that a photon moving through the material still moves at the speed of c, but when it encounters the atom of the material, it is absorbed by the atom via an atomic transition. After a very slight delay, a photon is then re-emitted. This explanation is incorrect and inconsistent with empirical observations...
...On the other hand, if a photon has an energy beyond the phonon spectrum, then while it can still cause a disturbance of the lattice ions, the solid cannot sustain this vibration, because the phonon mode isn't available. This is similar to trying to oscillate something at a different frequency than the resonance frequency. So the lattice does not absorb this photon and it is re-emitted but with a very slight delay. This, naively, is the origin of the apparent slowdown of the light speed in the material. The emitted photon may encounter other lattice ions as it makes its way through the material and this accumulate the delay.
So, you mean to say that, from the instant the photon hits side A of the solid lattice to the instant it comes out of side B, the photon has disappeared? And where the energy has gone between the two?
 
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  • #131
Gza said:
What exactly are you "deriving" here? All you're doing is taking a simple statement and making it more complicated than it needs to be.

When Schrödinger Dog introduced the discussion of "a photon never propagates at less than c", I did understand its reason that he had explained. Because of that I studied the rejection of reason of this phenomenon in other references that they had explained. There is no any difference both of the our describtions.

marlon said:
Could you pinpoint that out to me, please. Btw, if you still have the time, i am still waiting for some answers to my questions. But i guess you will chose the easy way out and just ignore my posts

I'm sorry. You laten. But,

1- Your questions aren't standard, amenable and irrelevant to discussion, But NONETHELESS we answered them in fore posts frequently.

2- The concepts such as "energy packet" can have spatial coordinates and thus for answering that, I introduced my question in post #30. But you could answer it because of logical reason and depended to valid sources absence.
Besides, you could answer my another question in post #70 that also Anonym had asked you question similar to this.

3- It is obvious that you did read the fore posts none. firstly read them carefully and then ask your PLATITUDINOUS questions.

If you going to repeat your repetitive questions, I won't answer them.

Thanks.
Mr Beh
 
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  • #132
Schrodinger's Dog said:
Light never propogates at less than c, all "frozen light" is, is when the emission and reabsorption of light in a materials matrix, is sufficient to cause the light's speed in terms of distance over time to slow to a virtual stand still, the photons are not motionless or frozen. The photons themselves are never traveling at less than light speed in this medium or any other medium for that matter.

I'm not sure how this indicates size at all, if I'm understanding the experiments, the light has merely been stopped by absorption in the atoms, thus it is not some photons but merely a more energetic structure that has yet emit those photons or the energy ie the light has been impeded from it's usual free movement in a vacuum to some extent by some sort of sodium atom condensates structure at extremely low temperatures.
Ok. Now let's consider void. Light doesn't interact with anything in there? There are virtual particles.
 
  • #133
Proof.Beh said:
1- Your questions aren't standard, amenable and irrelevant to discussion, But NONETHELESS we answered them in fore posts frequently.
My questions aren't standard ? :rofl:

Again here is what i asked you : "I URGE you to reread the double slit experiment and try figuring out why it is USELESS to be talking about a photon's trajectory in terms of x,y and z. Again, please refer me to a textbook that gives me an equation of this path in terms of x,y, and z. Besides, all of this deals with the trajectory, not the actual photon size. You argue that the energy packet "depends" on x,y and z (whatever that means). Well, it's spatial position DOES because it propagates through space. BUT THAT IS ALL YOU CAN SAY !

Based upon this, what POSSIBLE claims can you make on the photons structure ? What equations describe that size/structure."

You say "a photon has size", i ask you "how can we measure that size" and now you say that's irrelevant ?
C'mon, you are going to have to do better than THAT !

You did NOT answer to my questions, you just decided to bail out of the discussion ! Just check what you did after post nr. 71 !

2- The concepts such as "energy packet" can have spatial coordinates and thus for answering that, I introduced my question in post #30. But you could answer it because of logical reason and depended to valid sources absence.
I refer you to https://www.amazon.com/dp/0582356911/?tag=pfamazon01-20. If you want, check any other intro QM text for that matter.

Besides, you could answer my another question in post #70 that also Anonym had asked you question similar to this.
Actually, if you reread my post (post nr. 71) following your question, you will notice that i asked for a clarification in your question. It was YOU who refused to continue our discussion. Just try to find any posts you wrote with respect to THAT after i asked you for more clarifications :rolleyes:.

3- It is obvious that you did read the fore posts none. firstly read them carefully and then ask your PLATITUDINOUS questions.
As a matter of fact i DID and i ask you again "when did Schrödinger's Dog ever started talking about the particle's trajectory in his explanation". Just reread the posts and you will see that it is YOU who always brings in this concept.

marlon
 
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  • #134
Cthugha said:
I am quite sure, there is nothing about the size of photons in that book, but I do just have the 1973 version here at the moment. Could you please give me the page, chapter or an exact quotation of the passage you mean, so I can check, what you mean?

Par. 4.2 “Some elementary concepts and definitions” p.148; specifically, p.149 and p. 151.

But only definitions are not enough. You should read the whole book.

Regards, Dany.
 
  • #135
Shahin said:
Ok, i have just said an idea for the size of the photon, i have never said enything about the electron. But i am glad that you can respond propely, and not telling me silly things, and stupid things, like anonym.

I guess you miss a point. First of all, this session is not about “How big is a photon” but about how we handle a problem, since it was discussed in QP of PF several times and start to be boring even before the problem is formulated.

It is common point that one should use the references (the previous discussions in PF included). But kids are not used to do that. That is all point Zz made and suggested to use the “Standard References”. No doubt that he is right and everybody agree. Only we did not agree with the details of the technical realization.

Several decades ago PDG did not included quarks for example. Obviously, it does not mean that the quarks did not exist. Moreover, during about 10 years physicists denied the experimental and theoretical evidence of them. Alternatively, in PDG was always written that the proton life time is infinite (stable). That did not prevent the very important experimental and theoretical investigations in HEP: QCD, experimental verification of the proton decay, GUT’s, etc. Since we did not agree with him, Zz even thought that we do not understand him: <ZapperZ bangs his head into the wall and cries>. But he is simply deadly wrong; he is not familiar with the “Bible” of ED, he does not know the modern electrodynamics.

However, I think that the problem is deeper. It should be clear to everybody that we are talking about field theory and fields (photon, electron, etc.) and the notions used by Greeks are not adequate. Even I. Newton already knew that.

From the pedagogical side, I do not agree with jtbell and agree with R.P.Feynman: it is meaningless to demonstrate more than once the same thing. If one did not understand it, the repetition will not help. In your post # 23 you randomly emitted the gold signal. Lack of understanding allowed you equally well to emit garbage (noise) in your post #35. jtbell explained it to you twice. I doubt that you understood. All that stuff in my POV one should do in his/her own. There is no other way to study physics. It is not picnic, it is spit blood.

Regards, Dany.

P.S. I guess that you do not read my posts and even if you do, the German word “eigenschaften” (alternative) tells you nothing. To those who are interesting, I used reference(that should be standard) to the “elementary particle” of information originally introduced by D.Hilbert and discussed by J. von Neumann in “Mathematische Grundlagen der Quantenmechanik”, Berlin, (1931), ch. III, par 5.

By the way, since after years of study I understand close to nothing, no doubt that you are right. But what wrong with jokes?
 
  • #136
Light arrow I take your first point, that is indeed what I meant to say, thanks for clarifying. Your second point is a tad picky though, ok I should of said that it is extremely unlikely that light will interact with anything in a vacuum thus its speed is c, instead of that it will not, but that would just cloud a fairly straightforward posit that light travels at c in a vacuum. Let's just say that a vacuum that contains particles with which light can interact is not really a vacuum and leave it at that. Assume that vacuum means emptyness even if this isn't entirely possible.

I'm just glad someone actual read a link provided, positively a rarity in the interweb :smile:
 
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  • #137
WHAT IS THE SIZE OF A PHOTON?
If you believe in extra dimensions then the size would be limited by the size of the extra dimension.
http://pdg.lbl.gov/2007/tables/sxxx.pdf
p.5
Constraints on the radius of extra dimensions for the case of two flat dimensions of equal radius
r < 90-660 nm (astrophysics; limits depend on technique and assumptions)
r < 0:22 mm, CL = 95% (direct tests of Newton's law; cited in Extra Dimensions
review)
-----------
Therefore, a maximum size of a photon would be either .22mm or 660nm. If you want to assume a way of making a bigger photon squeeze into a small hole (dimension) then you do not have any constraints on the size of a photon.
--------------
As far as I can figure out, everyone assumes that an emitter of a photon cannot emit a photon bigger than what it is. Also, an absorber of a photon has got to be bigger than the photon. So, from
http://pdg.lbl.gov/2007/tables/bxxx.pdf
PROTON
Charge radius = 0.875 ± 0.007 fm
NEUTRON
Mean-square charge radius R^2n_ = 0.1161 ± 0.0022 fm2 (S = 1.3)
-----------------
Therefore, we have another kind of constraint on the size of a photon. The size of a proton/neutron.

How small can a photon get? If quarks are proven to emit photons then this would be determined by the sizes of quarks.
----------------
http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/hep-ph/pdf/0611/0611005v1.pdf
QCD, New Physics and Experiment
Giuseppe Nardulli
01 Nov 2006
Abstract. I give a summary of Section E of the seventh edition of the Conference Quark confinement
and the hadron spectrum. Papers were presented on different subjects, from spectroscopy,
including pentaquarks and hadron structure, to the quest for physics beyond the standard model

For EM interactions one gets limit on the mass of a heavy electron: m∗ = 308±56 GeV and = 1253.2±226 GeV, correspondingfor the finite size of the electron a limit of to a
size r ≈ 16×10−18cm . For EW interaction the most stringent limits for the quarks are
rq < 2.2×10−18cm, for the leptons rl < 0.9×10−18 cm, and the form factor puts a limit
on the electron size of re < 28×10−18cm. Finally a scheme to describe all fundamental particles as extended objects of a finite geometrical size was presented by , J¨urgen Ulbricht.
--------------
QUARKS
http://pdg.lbl.gov/2007/reviews/quarks_q000.pdf

See my blog for more references.
 
  • #138
Schrodinger's Dog said:
Light arrow I take your first point, that is indeed what I meant to say, thanks for clarifying. Your second point is a tad picky though, ok I should of said that it is extremely unlikely that light will interact with anything in a vacuum thus its speed is c, instead of that it will not, but that would just cloud a fairly straightforward posit that light travels at c in a vacuum. Let's just say that a vacuum that contains particles with which light can interact is not really a vacuum and leave it at that. Assume that vacuum means emptyness even if this isn't entirely possible.

I'm just glad someone actual read a link provided, positively a rarity in the interweb :smile:
Ok, however I am wondering if the effect of virtual particles is really so small: it would seem that no one has provided yet a generally accepted way of computing the exact value of void's energy density, and not even how void's properties would change, electric and magnetic permittivity, for example (and, so, light's speed).

If it resulted that, at a reasonable level of precision, light propagation wouldn't change much in a void "devoid" of virtual particles, then I would agree with you.
(Thank you for your smile, BTW:smile:).
 
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  • #139
jal said:
WHAT IS THE SIZE OF A PHOTON?
If you believe in extra dimensions then the size would be limited by the size of the extra dimension.
http://pdg.lbl.gov/2007/tables/sxxx.pdf
p.5
Constraints on the radius of extra dimensions for the case of two flat dimensions of equal radius
r < 90-660 nm (astrophysics; limits depend on technique and assumptions)
r < 0:22 mm, CL = 95% (direct tests of Newton's law; cited in Extra Dimensions
review)
-----------
Therefore, a maximum size of a photon would be either .22mm or 660nm. If you want to assume a way of making a bigger photon squeeze into a small hole (dimension) then you do not have any constraints on the size of a photon.
--------------
As far as I can figure out, everyone assumes that an emitter of a photon cannot emit a photon bigger than what it is. Also, an absorber of a photon has got to be bigger than the photon. So, from
http://pdg.lbl.gov/2007/tables/bxxx.pdf
PROTON
Charge radius = 0.875 ± 0.007 fm
NEUTRON
Mean-square charge radius R^2n_ = 0.1161 ± 0.0022 fm2 (S = 1.3)
-----------------
Therefore, we have another kind of constraint on the size of a photon. The size of a proton/neutron.

How small can a photon get? If quarks are proven to emit photons then this would be determined by the sizes of quarks.
----------------
http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/hep-ph/pdf/0611/0611005v1.pdf
QCD, New Physics and Experiment
Giuseppe Nardulli
01 Nov 2006
Abstract. I give a summary of Section E of the seventh edition of the Conference Quark confinement
and the hadron spectrum. Papers were presented on different subjects, from spectroscopy,
including pentaquarks and hadron structure, to the quest for physics beyond the standard model

For EM interactions one gets limit on the mass of a heavy electron: m∗ = 308±56 GeV and = 1253.2±226 GeV, correspondingfor the finite size of the electron a limit of to a
size r ≈ 16×10−18cm . For EW interaction the most stringent limits for the quarks are
rq < 2.2×10−18cm, for the leptons rl < 0.9×10−18 cm, and the form factor puts a limit
on the electron size of re < 28×10−18cm. Finally a scheme to describe all fundamental particles as extended objects of a finite geometrical size was presented by , J¨urgen Ulbricht.
--------------
QUARKS
http://pdg.lbl.gov/2007/reviews/quarks_q000.pdf

See my blog for more references.

Very good. but, do you know what is the essential problem? Problem is that persons such as marlon and ZapperZ ,though we introduced the sources for proof our claim (a photon has size), they don't agree with existence of size for photon! :rofl:

Anyway, they must see your VALID and STANDARD sources to understand there is no sense for their claim.

Thanks.
Mr Beh
 
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  • #140
Proof.Beh said:
Very good. but, do you know what is the essential problem? Problem is that persons such as marlon and ZapperZ ,though we introduced the sources for proof our claim (a photon has size), they don't agree with existence of size for photon! :rofl:

Anyway, they must see your VALID and STANDARD sources to understand there is no sense for their claim.

Thanks.
Mr Beh

I wouldn't over-extend a statement to be a proof. I think you can say that 'you've introduced the sources your claim', but there is no (I believe) proof for the existence of size for photon.----and either marlon or ZapperZ probably have more knowledge in the area than (you + me) ^2.-- (and probably ^4)--(ok, even maybe even^6)
 
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