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can anybody explain to me virtual particles and how they related to the zero point energy?
The discussion revolves around the concepts of virtual particles and their relationship to zero-point energy, exploring theoretical implications and interpretations within quantum mechanics. Participants examine the nature of virtual particles, their effects, and how they relate to observable phenomena such as the Casimir effect and magnetic fields.
Participants express various interpretations and hypotheses regarding virtual particles and zero-point energy, with no clear consensus on definitions or the implications of these concepts. The discussion remains unresolved with multiple competing views presented.
Participants highlight the complexity of distinguishing between real and virtual particles, the implications of quantum fluctuations, and the measurement problem in quantum mechanics. There are also references to specific phenomena like the Casimir effect and magnetic fields, which may depend on further assumptions or definitions.
It is sometimes said that all photons are virtual photons. This is because the world-lines of photons always resemble the dotted line in the above Feynman diagram: the photon was emitted somewhere (say, a distant star), and then is absorbed somewhere else (say a photoreceptor cell in the eyeball). Furthermore, in the photon's frame of reference, no time elapses between emission and absorption. This statement illustrates the difficulty of trying to distinguish between "real" and "virtual" particles as mathematically they are the same objects and it is only our definition of "reality" which is at weakness here.
Ratzinger said:this article says
Could someone comment on that?
Is it correct to say that all fundamental fields are transmitted by virtual particle, but if these fields are disturbed, so if they set in wave motion then real particle (well-defined in energy) propagate and only then energy gets exchanged?