Isn't all action, spooky action at a distance

  • Thread starter g.lemaitre
  • Start date
In summary, the conversation discusses the concept of empty space within protons and the behavior of quarks within them. It also touches on the idea of quantum entanglement and the speed of nuclear forces. The Pauli Exclusion Principle is mentioned as a factor in the behavior of particles at a distance. There is a discussion about the structure of the nucleus and the role of the strong nuclear force in holding particles together. Finally, there is a mention of how particles interact and maintain a distance from each other, even at a microscopic level.
  • #1
g.lemaitre
267
2
There is a lot of empty space inside a proton. A proton is 10^-15 m and a quark is 10^-18 m, so that's 3 orders of magnitude which is equivalent to 1 m versus 1,000 meters. And there is certainly even more empty space inside a quark but we don't know for sure yet if ever. So two protons do not occupy the same space due to the Pauli Exclusion Principle, therefore 3 quarks, say 1 meter long, do not occupy the same space as three other quarks a 1000 meters away because of some mysterious property they have. They are acting at a distance. They know that they are not supposed to occupy the same space that three other quarks occupy and they are doing this at a distance. Is this picture correct?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #2
g.lemaitre said:
There is a lot of empty space inside a proton. A proton is 10^-15 m and a quark is 10^-18 m, so that's 3 orders of magnitude which is equivalent to 1 m versus 1,000 meters. And there is certainly even more empty space inside a quark but we don't know for sure yet if ever. So two protons do not occupy the same space due to the Pauli Exclusion Principle, therefore 3 quarks, say 1 meter long, do not occupy the same space as three other quarks a 1000 meters away because of some mysterious property they have. They are acting at a distance. They know that they are not supposed to occupy the same space that three other quarks occupy and they are doing this at a distance. Is this picture correct?

there are nuclear forces involved in case of protons, neutrons etc..i think

in quantum entanglement scientists have been unable to detected the "forces/fields" (if they do even exist) yet.

also- the disturbance travels (max) at the speed of light in case of the four (yet known) fundamental forces. however in case of quantum entanglement it's thought to be instantaneous or at the least/minimum 10,000 times the speed of light
 
Last edited:
  • #3
San K said:
there are nuclear forces involved in case of protons, neutrons etc..i think

I'm talking about how the protons know not to occupy the same state of another proton.
 
  • #4
g.lemaitre said:
There is a lot of empty space inside a proton. A proton is 10^-15 m and a quark is 10^-18 m, so that's 3 orders of magnitude which is equivalent to 1 m versus 1,000 meters. And there is certainly even more empty space inside a quark but we don't know for sure yet if ever. So two protons do not occupy the same space due to the Pauli Exclusion Principle, therefore 3 quarks, say 1 meter long, do not occupy the same space as three other quarks a 1000 meters away because of some mysterious property they have. They are acting at a distance. They know that they are not supposed to occupy the same space that three other quarks occupy and they are doing this at a distance. Is this picture correct?

There is a lot to comment upon in your description. First, protons repel because they are positively charged, not because of the Pauli exclusion principle. This repulsion is more than overcome by the attractive effect of the strong force.

Second, action at a distance between the nucleus and its bound electrons occurs by mediation of the electromagnetic force operating at the speed of light. There is nothing "spooky" about that (in normal parlance), what is considered spooky is when the effect is instantaneous.

I would recommend that you read up a bit more on the Standard Model, there is a lot to understand in the structure of an atom.
 
  • #5
DrChinese said:
There is a lot to comment upon in your description. First, protons repel because they are positively charged, not because of the Pauli exclusion principle.
You still have the problem of how the proton knows that another proton is a proton and not a neutron. Two, how is that protons do not occupy the same space as a neutron?
 
  • #6
g.lemaitre said:
You still have the problem of how the proton knows that another proton is a proton and not a neutron. Two, how is that protons do not occupy the same space as a neutron?

The structure of the nucleus is mostly described as a result of the strong nuclear force. Therefore, both neutrons and protons are "attracted" into the bundle we call the nucleus (only protons repel electromagnetically), and both are spin 1/2 particles. The interactions between these particles are mediated by forces which operate at the speed of light c. By definition, these are not spooky.
 
  • #7
DrChinese said:
The structure of the nucleus is mostly described as a result of the strong nuclear force. Therefore, both neutrons and protons are "attracted" into the bundle we call the nucleus (only protons repel electromagnetically), and both are spin 1/2 particles. The interactions between these particles are mediated by forces which operate at the speed of light c. By definition, these are not spooky.

You don't understand what I mean. Let's focus on the Pauli Exclusion Principle. When one billiard ball hits another billiard ball, the quarks from one billiard ball do not touch the quarks from another billiard ball. The quarks from one are pushing the quarks from the other but they do it at a distance, they never touch each other, even though that distance is 10^-15 m it is still a distance. The 3 quarks are only 10^-18 m yet a 4th quarks cannot enter into a space 10^-15 m, that's equivalent to three one meter objects occupying a space 1000 m's large and excluding anything from entering into that space.
 
  • #8
g.lemaitre said:
When one billiard ball hits another billiard ball, the quarks from one billiard ball do not touch the quarks from another billiard ball.
Speaking in layman terms, the particles keep a distance between them because they don't interact directly but via other particles called gauge bosons. In the case of quarks, these could in principle be the gluons of the strong interaction, but they only act on very small distances. In your case, it will be the photons of the electromagnetic interaction which mediate the repulsion between the billard balls.
 
  • #9
g.lemaitre said:
You don't understand what I mean. Let's focus on the Pauli Exclusion Principle. When one billiard ball hits another billiard ball, the quarks from one billiard ball do not touch the quarks from another billiard ball. The quarks from one are pushing the quarks from the other but they do it at a distance, they never touch each other, even though that distance is 10^-15 m it is still a distance. The 3 quarks are only 10^-18 m yet a 4th quarks cannot enter into a space 10^-15 m, that's equivalent to three one meter objects occupying a space 1000 m's large and excluding anything from entering into that space.

Not sure about your question then, as it seems you have a suitable understanding of the nucleus. There is of course a field effect, a sea of virtual particles, etc. The PEP is relatively short range, obviously affecting electrons over a larger distance than nucleons. So the question seems to be, how does any quantum system know to behave according to these rules? Or are you saying that the PEP acts non-locally? Or?
 
  • #10
g.lemaitre, You're making a common mistake of thinking that quantum particles are somehow just like classical particles, only with the Pauli excusion principle tacked on. In the classical world, if you have two marbles, say, you have two things. And they only find out about each other by direct contact. In the quantum world, if you have two identical fermions, you have one thing.

They are excitations of one and the same quantum field, whether they are 10-13 cm apart or 10+13 cm apart. And it is simply impossible for both of them to be in the same state. The Pauli principle does not just forbid them to be located at the same point, it says the two-particle wavefunction that describes them must be antisymmetric. This is not a 'force' or a 'repulsion' or 'action at a distance'. It's a basic property of the field, and you can't create an excitation (i.e. a particle) that violates it.
 
  • #11
Bill_K said:
They are excitations of one and the same quantum field, whether they are 10-13 cm apart or 10+13 cm apart. And it is simply impossible for both of them to be in the same state. The Pauli principle does not just forbid them to be located at the same point, it says the two-particle wavefunction that describes them must be antisymmetric.

As I understand his question, I think you are answering it. That would make the system exhibit the non-local property that would provide the spooky action at a distance. I guess I hadn't realized this element existed in the puzzle as you would need to bring the particles together first (I guess).
 
  • #12
Ok, I decided to track down a passage form Paul Davies that sort of addresses my problem. First I'm not claiming that there is action out there faster than the speed of light except of course entangled particles, the passage by Davies below does point out a conundrum.

What I'm concerned about is how one object communicates its presence to another object. So a billiard ball pushes another one due to electric charge because all the protons of the ball are surrounded by electrons and electrons repel each other. But I didn't know that this repulsion was communicated by photons or is it? Would someone walk me through just exactly what happens when a ball collides with another and how this collision is communicated at the electron level.

Paul Davies said:
Imagine striking a golf ball with a club, sending it flying. Being perfectly rigid, the golf ball would have to move off without any change of shape: all parts of the ball must start moving together. But now we run into a snag. No force can travel faster than light, so the blow delivered to one side of the ball can’t be felt by the other side until at least the time that light would take to traverse the
ball. Consequently the struck side would have to start moving before the remote side. But then the ball would have to change shape — it would be compressed. It follows that the ball must have at least a certain amount of squashiness: perfectly rigid bodies are inconsistent with the theory of relativity. But if an electron can be squashed, then it can also be stretched — and, if assaulted violently enough, pulled apart. So a little golf-ball electron couldn’t be a truly elementary body either.
But what if we imagine the little ball shrunk to a single point? Light would then take no time at all to traverse the (zero) distance across it. Unfortunately that solves one problem only to create another. There is electric charge distributed through the little ball. Imagine trying to shrink the ball, complete with its resident charge, to a smaller and smaller radius. To compress the charge into ever-smaller volumes requires the expenditure of energy to overcome the electrical repulsion. According to the inverse square law of electric force discovered in the eighteenth century by Charles Coulomb,4 the repulsion between the parts of the ball rises without limit as the charge is confined to ever-smaller volumes. An infinite amount of energy would be needed to compress the ball to zero radius, and this energy would be stored inside the electron. Taking into account Einstein’s formula E = mc^2 ,an infinite internal energy has the nonsensical implication that the electron should have an infinite mass. So we are left with a dilemma: the electron can be neither a point nor a finite ball without coming into flagrant contradiction with reality.
Now, you might think that quantum mechanics would come to the rescue here. By smearing out the spatial location of a pointlike particle, it would seem to circumvent the difficulty that all portions of the electric charge are accumulated at a single place. In fact, quantum mechanics makes the problem even worse. To get some idea of why, remember how electric forces are conveyed in quantum mechanics — by the exchange of photons (see Figure 17, p. 96). The same forces will also act between the various bits of charge distributed through the “little ball,” implying that a swarm of virtual photons surrounds and interpenetrates the electron. A calculation shows that the swarm’s energy gets bigger as the size of the electron gets smaller, because the close-in virtual photons are the most energetic. The total energy of the swarm rises to infinity as the radius of the electron is shrunk to zero. It doesn’t matter that the overall spatial location of the electron might be ill defined: wherever it is, the cloud is there with it, clothing it with limitless amounts of energy, and hence mass.
What are we to make of this? By using mathematical tricks, physicists are able to dodge round the infinities and still use the theory of quantum electrodynamics to obtain sensible answers to questions about particle masses, energy levels, scattering processes, and so on. The theory remains brilliantly successful. But the fact that infinities occur is a worrying symptom that something is deeply wrong, something that needs fixing.

The same general analysis can be applied to the gravitational field. Shrinking a ball to zero radius would involve infinite gravitational energy. Quantum mechanically, the gravitational force is conveyed by gravitons, and the gravitational field surrounding a particle can be envisaged as a cloud of virtual gravitons. As in the electromagnetic case, infinities follow. But with gravitation there is double trouble. Any pointlike particle (for example, an electron) would be surrounded by a virtual graviton cloud containing infinite energy.

But because energy is a source of gravitation, gravitons themselves contribute to the total gravitational field. (In effect, gravity gravitates.) So each virtual graviton in the cloud surrounding the central particle possesses its own cloud of yet more gravitons clustering around it, and so on ad infinitum: clouds around clouds around clouds ... and each cloud contains infinite energy! This time the infinities can’t be so easily dodged. A straightforward quantum description of the gravitational field produces a limitless progression of infinities, ruining any hope of making sensible predictions from the theory.
 
  • #13
Would someone walk me through just exactly what happens when a ball collides with another and how this collision is communicated at the electron level.
There really isn't that much to it.

Atoms like to be a minimum distance apart. If you try to push them closer together, they push back! The simplest example to talk about is two hydrogen atoms. Approaching each other, they can bounce apart, or they can form a hydrogen molecule. How close they come results from a quantum mechanical calculation, in which you look for the minimum energy configuration. In doing this, you have to take into account the repulsion of the two electrons, the repulsion of the two protons, and the attraction of each proton for each electron. And -- the Pauli exclusion principle.

But the force between atoms is basically electrostatic in origin. This force comes into effect when you collide objects, and also produces the elastic restoring forces when you squeeze an object.
 
  • #14
Bill_K said:
There really isn't that much to it.
Atoms like to be a minimum distance apart. If you try to push them closer together, they push back! The simplest example to talk about is two hydrogen atoms. Approaching each other, they can bounce apart, or they can form a hydrogen molecule. How close they come results from a quantum mechanical calculation, in which you look for the minimum energy configuration. In doing this, you have to take into account the repulsion of the two electrons, the repulsion of the two protons, and the attraction of each proton for each electron. And -- the Pauli exclusion principle.
But the force between atoms is basically electrostatic in origin. This force comes into effect when you collide objects, and also produces the elastic restoring forces when you squeeze an object.

I know all that. I'm trying to get beyond that simple picture. Is repulsion communicated by photons? The fact that one electron knows that another is repulsive, is there an explanation for that, or is it just a brute fact? If two electrons do not exchange messenger particles, photons I guess, then it would appear that they are aware of each other instantaneously.
 
  • #15
g.lemaitre said:
Is repulsion communicated by photons? The fact that one electron knows that another is repulsive, is there an explanation for that, or is it just a brute fact? If two electrons do not exchange messenger particles, photons I guess, then it would appear that they are aware of each other instantaneously.

This is a field effect (virtual particles are involved). Photons mediate the force between charged particles. And that is NOT instantaneous. How repulsion and attraction itself actually occurs is a more complicated process and probably beyond the scope of this thread. Suffice it to say that whenever you have mediation by particles like photons (electromagnetic force) or gluons (strong force), the effect propagates at c and no faster.
 

1. What is "spooky action at a distance" in relation to action?

"Spooky action at a distance" refers to the phenomenon in quantum mechanics where particles can be connected or influence each other even when separated by large distances without any apparent physical interaction.

2. What is the scientific explanation for "spooky action at a distance"?

The scientific explanation for "spooky action at a distance" is based on the principles of quantum entanglement, where particles become entangled and share a connection that allows them to behave as one system, even when separated by large distances. This connection is not dependent on any physical interaction and is still not fully understood by scientists.

3. Is "spooky action at a distance" a real phenomenon or just a theoretical concept?

"Spooky action at a distance" has been proven to be a real phenomenon through various experiments and observations in quantum mechanics. However, its underlying mechanisms are still not fully understood and remain a topic of ongoing research and debate.

4. How does "spooky action at a distance" challenge our understanding of physics?

"Spooky action at a distance" challenges our understanding of physics because it goes against classical physics principles, such as causality and locality. It suggests that particles can have instantaneous connections and influence each other without any physical interaction, which defies our traditional understanding of how the universe works.

5. Are there any practical applications of "spooky action at a distance"?

While the phenomenon of "spooky action at a distance" is still not fully understood, there have been some proposed practical applications, such as quantum teleportation and quantum cryptography. However, more research is needed to fully understand and harness this phenomenon for practical use.

Similar threads

  • Atomic and Condensed Matter
Replies
5
Views
1K
Replies
3
Views
2K
  • Quantum Physics
Replies
19
Views
1K
Replies
1
Views
899
  • Quantum Interpretations and Foundations
4
Replies
138
Views
5K
Replies
6
Views
4K
  • Quantum Interpretations and Foundations
Replies
31
Views
1K
  • Quantum Physics
Replies
31
Views
6K
  • High Energy, Nuclear, Particle Physics
Replies
2
Views
2K
  • High Energy, Nuclear, Particle Physics
Replies
6
Views
4K
Back
Top