What is the true nature of a photon?

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The discussion centers on the nature of photons and when the term is valid, exploring concepts such as their existence in a vacuum and the implications of measurement on their behavior. Participants argue that photons exist continuously between emission and absorption, regardless of interaction with matter, and that they represent quantized interactions between the electromagnetic field and matter. There is a debate about whether electromagnetic waves can be equated with photons and the impact of measurement on the understanding of photons. The conversation also touches on the philosophical implications of knowledge versus theory in physics, emphasizing that all understanding is based on empirical observations. Ultimately, the nature of photons remains complex, with ongoing discussions about their definition and behavior in various contexts.
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When is the term "photon" valid?

This question seems to have taken on different forms in a separate post:
a) Do photons exist in empty space (vacuum)?
b) Do photons exist in the absence of interaction (with matter)?
c) Are photons called photons only when they are exhibiting particle-like behavior?
d) Are electromagnetic waves photons?
e) ...

There may be subtleties to these questions, but let's try to cover the straightforward answers first.

Please review marlon's and ZapperZ's FAQ topic "Is light a particle or a wave"
 
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My take is that photons exist continuously between emission and absorption/annihilation regardless of interaction with matter, else statements like "photons travel (in a vacuum) at the speed of light, c" would have no meaning.
 
kwestion said:
My take is that photons exist continuously between emission and absorption/annihilation regardless of interaction with matter, else statements like "photons travel (in a vacuum) at the speed of light, c" would have no meaning.
Furthermore, quantum electrodynamics, quantizing the electromagnetic field, assumes photons exist whenever the em field exists, so, by definition, even between source and detector. However, since, in my opinion, we should always talk about measurable things, in physics, then I have doubts about the physical meaning of photons between source and detector, but it's only my opinion of course.
 
kwestion said:
d) Are electromagnetic waves photons?

Are water waves H2O molecules?

Zz.
 
measurement alters what's being observed

lightarrow said:
I have doubts about the physical meaning of photons between source and detector.
Cool. What if I turn the statement around and have doubts about the physical meaning of photons at the source and detector instead?

As an analogy, nitroglycerin might really be described with a calm image of an oily liquid. However the imagery and measurements that we get upon arrival at the (clumsy) detector is completely different because the original item is no longer nitro, but dramatically transforms into spent fuel because of the detector.

If we look at the endpoints, aren't we really often measuring the destruction of a photon rather than the photon itself?
 
kwestion said:
Cool. What if I turn the statement around and have doubts about the physical meaning of photons at the source and detector instead?

As an analogy, nitroglycerin might really be described with a calm image of an oily liquid. However the imagery and measurements that we get upon arrival at the (clumsy) detector is completely different because the original item is no longer nitro, but dramatically transforms into spent fuel because of the detector.

If we look at the endpoints, aren't we really often measuring the destruction of a photon rather than the photon itself?

You need to look at the issue surrounding Bell-type experiments and "local realism" (or lack thereof) within the context of QM.

Furthermore, everything that you know of, really, is based on what you measured/detected/observed. It isn't restricted only to "photons".

Zz.
 
ZapperZ said:
Are water waves H2O molecules?
QUOTE]

Thanks, how about:
Photons aren't the electromagnetic waves themselves, but photons are responsible for electromagnetic phenomena.​
 
Help?
ZapperZ said:
You need to look at the issue surrounding Bell-type experiments and "local realism" (or lack thereof) within the context of QM.
Are you suggesting to ponder a sort of "undefined-ness" before detection as opposed to unknown?

ZapperZ said:
Furthermore, everything that you know of, really, is based on what you measured/detected/observed. It isn't restricted only to "photons".
Okay, knowledge vs theory.
Our typical observations of a grain of sand are gentle enough not to alter the grain all that much. On the other hand if we are in a dark room detecting nitro with a swinging hammer we're more likely to detect an explosion than to detect an oily liquid. The hammer, when it doesn't detect nitro tells us something, about say the limited size of the nitro in its stable state. When the hammer does detect nitro, it gives us a very different image that we shouldn't extrapolate backwards as the interpretation of the stable state.
 
kwestion said:
Cool. What if I turn the statement around and have doubts about the physical meaning of photons at the source and detector instead?
The photon represents the quantized interaction between EM field and matter, so it's at least present at source and detector by definition.
As an analogy, nitroglycerin might really be described with a calm image of an oily liquid. However the imagery and measurements that we get upon arrival at the (clumsy) detector is completely different because the original item is no longer nitro, but dramatically transforms into spent fuel because of the detector.

If we look at the endpoints, aren't we really often measuring the destruction of a photon rather than the photon itself?
But you *are* able to detect nitroglicerin oil with the appropriate instruments; with photons it's all another story because you are'nt even theoretically able to detect "the original item". Can you see the difference? :smile:
 
  • #10
kwestion said:
Okay, knowledge vs theory.

No such thing. This isn't about knowledge versus theory, because "theory and knowledge", at least valid ones, are based on what we can verify emprically!

Our typical observations of a grain of sand are gentle enough not to alter the grain all that much. On the other hand if we are in a dark room detecting nitro with a swinging hammer we're more likely to detect an explosion than to detect an oily liquid. The hammer, when it doesn't detect nitro tells us something, about say the limited size of the nitro in its stable state. When the hammer does detect nitro, it gives us a very different image that we shouldn't extrapolate backwards as the interpretation of the stable state.

You have missed the point. Everything that you think you know is based on your knowledge of a set of properties and characteristics of that entity. Think about it. These properties and characteristics are based on what you have measured/observed/detected of these entities. It has nothing to do with what you just described here.

Zz.
 
  • #11
lightarrow said:
The photon represents the quantized interaction between EM field and matter, so it's at least present at source and detector by definition.

I'm a little confused. The above statement on its own would lead me to think that the photon is defined only during the interaction. I don't think that's what you are trying to say though.
 
  • #12
lightarrow said:
But you *are* able to detect nitroglicerin oil with the appropriate instruments; with photons it's all another story because you are'nt even theoretically able to detect "the original item". Can you see the difference? :smile:

I'm not sure I'm catching the nuances of your statement. In some sense, it's like all of our instruments are like hammers to the photon, no?

If we aren't able to even theoretically detect the original item, which is my point too, then aren't we on the same page when I try to represent that the "pure" thing really only exists when we, or matter itself, aren't tampering/interacting with it? I'm pretty sure I'm not representing your thoughts, but I'm not sure what's different still.
 
  • #13
ZapperZ said:
You have missed the point. Everything that you think you know is based on your knowledge of a set of properties and characteristics of that entity.

I'm not sure how I missed the point Zz. I hope it didn't sound sarcastic.

From where I stand, a theory isn't just a list of measured facts, but it's reasoning that fills in the blanks to explanation of facts. There can be multiple good and competing theories supporting the same verifiable facts. In this sense, knowledge and fact are different than theory, no?

I thought you and lightarrow were emphasizing that technically, the only facts we have are measurements, and whatever else goes on between the measurements was sort of in a black box that we could only technically theorize about.

Thinking that I got your point, I started to draw out that the measurement of the facts was a two-edged sword--it alters the thing we are measuring and it can be difficult to subract out the effects of the measurement in order to create a theory of what happens in the black box.

Not sure where the disconnect is.
 
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  • #14
kwestion said:
I'm not sure how I missed the point Zz. I hope it didn't sound sarcastic.

From where I stand, a theory isn't just a list of measured facts, but it's reasoning that fills in the blanks to explanation of facts. There can be multiple good and competing theories supporting the same verifiable facts. In this sense, knowledge and fact are different than theory, no?

Illustrate this with an example. For instance, how are Maxwell equations a "reasoning"?

Zz.
 
  • #15
ZapperZ said:
Illustrate this with an example. For instance, how are Maxwell equations a "reasoning"?

How about this: Maxwell made mathematical reasoning to modify Ampere's law. Maxwell's equations and Newton's mechanics both agreed with observations made at the time. Maxwell's reasoning, and not necessarily measured observation, filled in some blanks that were unobservable at the time. The blend of facts and reasoning made predicitions whose facts could only be measured later.

Sound okay?
 
  • #16
kwestion said:
How about this: Maxwell made mathematical reasoning to modify Ampere's law. Maxwell's equations and Newton's mechanics both agreed with observations made at the time. Maxwell's reasoning, and not necessarily measured observation, filled in some blanks that were unobservable at the time. The blend of facts and reasoning made predicitions whose facts could only be measured later.

Sound okay?

No, because none of what you said can be backed up. Maxwell equations really are nothing more than a set of mathematical description. It "reasoned" nothing! In fact, one can easily describe them as phenomenological, which means that to put it crudely, it is nothing more than a well-defined description of empirical observations. It says nothing on why the E and B fields are that way, i.e. no reason!

Again, show a theory that actually satisfy what you are claiming that it can do.

Zz.
 
  • #17
ZapperZ said:
No, because none of what you said can be backed up. Maxwell equations really are nothing more than a set of mathematical description. It "reasoned" nothing! In fact, one can easily describe them as phenomenological, which means that to put it crudely, it is nothing more than a well-defined description of empirical observations. It says nothing on why the E and B fields are that way, i.e. no reason!

Again, show a theory that actually satisfy what you are claiming that it can do.

Zz.

I thought your point was that we know nothing more than what we observe.

The mathematical descriptions are not the same as empirical observations. Empirical observations wouldn't generally use an "equals" sign, but would put bounds on the experimental error. As we get better measuring techniques, we often recheck basic theories for any undiscovered news that the mathematical descriptions didn't show.

We can take mathematical descriptions, combine them and conjure up physical situations that have never before been observed. In this case, it isn't the reason why things happen, but it is still reasoning.

Maybe an example could be that a ...body stays in motion... We haven't actually observed this "law" to be true--nobody has observed a body for an infinitely long time, but it seems reasonable enough to use in our equations.

Are we still on different pages? I do want to understand the photon better, so...
 
  • #18
Our set of observations allows us to formulate (i.e. put in mathematics) how a system will behave under the same condition wihtout having to redo the whole experiment. What's what a phenomenology is - to describe the behavior of a system. It "reasoned" nothing the way you claim a theory would do.

Newton's first law is a description of a behavior of an object under (or without) a force. I could say that no one as verified that it will work for all forces over an infinite amount of time, yet, we know the description has worked so far (your house was built using that premise). But did this "reasoned" anythiing? Look at the original premise that you made that I objected to.

If you want to understand photons better, learn QM and QED, not by claiming something a theory isn't.

Zz.
 
  • #19
ZapperZ said:
[...]It "reasoned" nothing the way you claim a theory would do.
[...] But did this "reasoned" anythiing? Look at the original premise that you made that I objected to.

If you want to understand photons better, learn QM and QED, not by claiming something a theory isn't.

Nobody here was trying to make claims about the definition of the word "theory" as a tool for understanding photons. That doesn't make sense to me. Additionally, statements like "It has nothing to do with ...", and "...none of what you said..., and "...nothing the way you..." are a bit suspiscious.

I'll try to stick with the dictionary definition of theory and hope you will too. Note that there are differing degrees of certainty to the word theory ranging from simple conjecture to scientific theory whose statements are well-backed by data and which are generally accepted. Many definitions will use the word "explain" in the definition. I may have used the word "reason". I'd almost bet that we agree that there are limits to what is meant by "explain" or "reason" in this context.

Not sure what premise you were talking about. Was it that measurement interferes with the subject being measured? I thought we agreed on that.
 
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  • #20
kwestion said:
Nobody here was trying to make claims about the definition of the word "theory" as a tool for understanding photons. That doesn't make sense to me. Additionally, statements like "It has nothing to do with ...", and "...none of what you said..., and "...nothing the way you..." are a bit suspiscious.

I'll try to stick with the dictionary definition of theory and hope you will too. Note that there are differing degrees of certainty to the word theory ranging from simple conjecture to scientific theory whose statements are well-backed by data and which are generally accepted. Many definitions will use the word "explain" in the definition. I'd almost bet that we agree that there are limits to what is meant by "explain".

Here's what you said earlier:

From where I stand, a theory isn't just a list of measured facts, but it's reasoning that fills in the blanks to explanation of facts. There can be multiple good and competing theories supporting the same verifiable facts. In this sense, knowledge and fact are different than theory, no?

You have continued to neglect to illustrate where such "reasoning" occurs. A valid theory does a lot of describing. I've given Maxwell Equations as an example, which you appears to have completely misunderstood. Did Gauss's law "reasoned" something? Or does it simply "describe" how the E-field looks like, given a charge distribution. Tell me where it "reasoned" it. The same could be said with Quantum Mechanics. Does it "reasoned" with you which outcome you would measure in a superposition of states? Or does it simply tell you all the possible outcome you would measure?

Your idea of what "knowledge" is is also strange. A set of facts or observation does not make a knowledge. That's stamp-collecting. It is the theory that provides a "frame" to understand how these facts and observations are connected together. What separates phenomenological theory versus a well-defined theory is that the latter could derive the former via First Principles. So a valid, well-defined theory IS, for all practical purposes, knowledge!

This thread is diverging into philosophy and anymore of this will probably push it into that forum.

Zz.
 
  • #21
I found two paragraphs on wikipedia that I hope leads to mutual understanding:

According to Stephen Hawking in A Brief History of Time, "a theory is a good theory if it satisfies two requirements: It must accurately describe a large class of observations on the basis of a model which contains only a few arbitrary elements, and it must make definite predictions about the results of future observations". He goes on to state, "any physical theory is always provisional, in the sense that it is only a hypothesis; you can never prove it. No matter how many times the results of experiments agree with some theory, you can never be sure that the next time the result will not contradict the theory. On the other hand, you can disprove a theory by finding even a single observation which disagrees with the predictions of the theory".​


An example of how theories are models can be seen from theories on the planetary system. The Greeks formulated theories which were recorded by the astronomer Ptolemy. In Ptolemy's planetary model, the Earth was at the center, the planets and the sun made circular orbits around the earth, and the stars were on a sphere outside of the orbits of the planet and the earth. Retrograde motion of the planets was explained by smaller circular orbits of individual planets. This could be illustrated as a model, and could even be built into a literal model. Mathematical calculations could be made which predicted, to a great degree of accuracy, where the planets would be. His model of the planetary system survived for over 1500 years until the time of Copernicus. So one can see that a theory is a "model of reality," one which explains certain scientific facts; yet the theory may not be a satisfactory picture of reality. Another, more acceptable, theory can later replace the previous model, as when the Copernican theory replaced the Ptolemaic theory. Or a new theory can be used to modify an older theory as when Einstein modified Newtonian mechanics (which is still used for designing bridges and gasoline engines) with his theories of relativity.​
 
  • #22
Why would anything of Wikipedia be any better? I mean, I could come in and edit that to suit my needs and interpretation.

Long-time members of this forum know better than to use Wikipedia when having a discussion with me. I'm never impressed by such source.

Zz.
 
  • #23
ZapperZ said:
Why would anything of Wikipedia be any better?
Honestly, I think you are intentionally twisting words. Quoting wikipedia stands a chance that the authors have had time to avoid verbal landmines.

As an example, my paraphrasing of the definition of the word "theory" included the word "reason" where other definitions may have used the word "explain". You seem to have relentlessly pounced on that even after I invited correction by referring to the dictionary and specifically downplayed the word "reason" in your behalf.
As an other example, you criticized the strangeness of my definition of the word "knowledge" when all I said was that it differed from theory. That isn't strange.
ZapperZ said:
I mean, I could come in and edit that to suit my needs and interpretation.
Agreed, but that's not the issue here, it's the verbal landmine. I'm not giving you a perfect score on the usage of words either, but I hope there are future possibilities of communication. I enjoyed your FAQ entries and hope some of those ideas in your head can make it past the language barrier.
 
  • #24
Back to physics?
I thought I sensed a reluctance by some of the posters to call a photon a photon outside of the points of emission and absorption. It seemed that the only description given between these points was an e/m wave. It almost seems as though some, but not all, posters didn't consider it as quantized energy between these points.

Here's the question: is there any difference between how we should be envisioning the photon at the emission/absorption point as opposed to the photon in empty space, or should we envision it as being exactly the same throughout its entire existence? The FAQ suggests to me that we envision it as exactly the same throughout, and that we should probably abandon the vision of switching between a traditional particle and wave, but its own thing.
 
  • #25
kwestion said:
Back to physics?
I thought I sensed a reluctance by some of the posters to call a photon a photon outside of the points of emission and absorption. It seemed that the only description given between these points was an e/m wave. It almost seems as though some, but not all, posters didn't consider it as quantized energy between these points.

Here's the question: is there any difference between how we should be envisioning the photon at the emission/absorption point as opposed to the photon in empty space, or should we envision it as being exactly the same throughout its entire existence? The FAQ suggests to me that we envision it as exactly the same throughout, and that we should probably abandon the vision of switching between a traditional particle and wave, but its own thing.
How do you define "photon"? If we don't agree on it we can't discuss about it. Please note that we are talking about physics, so your definition should refer to a *physical* entity.
 
  • #26
I never quite understood the concept of photons "travelling" through space...or more accurately, existing at any point between emission and absorption.

We see a beam of light because the medium that exists between emission and absorption "scatters" some of the photons causing the absorption point to be our eyes instead of the object at the end of the beam for those few photons, giving us the impression that there is a torrent of energy coursing through space. We place lenses/prisms/etc... in the beam and watch the beam change its shape and/or direction, enforcing that impression. Those lenses/prisms/etc... may even get hot because the atoms they are made of absorb some of the photons, even further enforcing the impression that some powerful beam of energy is coursing through it.

But relativity states that for anything traveling at the "speed" of light, space would have to contract to a singularity in the direction of travel. I don't pretend to know what it's like to experience the knowable universe as a singularity, as I assume a photon must since it obviously "travels" at the speed of light, but I assume that in a singularity, all possible points along the path of the thing doing the traveling must overlap, that is, in some way, every place a photon can go (its knowable universe) exists in one place to the photon (even the term "place" would be meaningless in a singularity). I also assume that from relativity we can deduce that from the photons perspective, it's "journey" would be instantaneous (time dilation), which makes sense since if all possible point along its path overlap, it shouldn't take any time for it to get where it's going. So does it necessarily have to actually exist between emission and absorption? Is it possible that what we interpret as the wave-function is actually just an interpretation we make because we don't quite get what it's like inside a singularity. Could it be that the concept of existing in spacetime to a photon is as meaningless as the concept of existing in a singularity is to us?

I'm just having fun (I like to bend my mind around crap like this), but when thinking about relativity, I can't help but intuit that the photon's target is actually chosen the instant it is emitted...that an atom absorbing a photon has as much a causal effect on the atom emitting it (no matter how far back in time) as the emitting atom has on the absorber. Putting things like lenses in the path certainly affects the probabilities of where the photon can be absorbed, but who knows how a lens can be said to affect a photon when it exists as a part of a singularity? Does the photon actually have to exist between emission and absorption?
 
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  • #27
Robert Noel said:
...I also assume that from relativity we can deduce that from the photons perspective, it's "journey" would be instantaneous (time dilation)
...Is it possible that what we interpret as the wave-function is actually just an interpretation we make because we don't quite get what it's like inside a singularity...
...I'm just having fun (I like to bend my mind around crap like this)

I'm relating to this bending thing. Seems like we have to let our imaginations explore a lot of ground to help gel facts together. Have others had success with this "out"?
 
  • #28
lightarrow said:
How do you define "photon"? If we don't agree on it we can't discuss about it. Please note that we are talking about physics, so your definition should refer to a *physical* entity.

Good point lightarrow. The American Heritage Science Dictionary:
The subatomic particle that carries the electromagnetic force and is the quantum of electromagnetic radiation. The photon has a rest mass of zero, but has measurable momentum, exhibits deflection by a gravitational field, and can exert a force. It has no electric charge, has an indefinitely long lifetime, and is its own antiparticle.​

The word "particle" in this definition seems to trip a lot of people up including myself, which is one reason why I wanted to involve the FAQ's commentary on that word.
lightarrow said:
Please note that we are talking about physics, so your definition should refer to a *physical* entity.

Physics speaks of energy, waves, fields, force, etc., not just nuggets of matter as I think you'll agree, so I'm not sure what you meant by restricting to a physical entity. According to the above, the photon "is" the quantum of electromagnetic radiation.
 
  • #29
I think I'm finding genneth's comment helpful.

As a rule: physics can't ever say what something *is*. It can only say what something *does*. However, we all like to have consistent mental models which does what the maths say, and a photon is one such model.​

"When is a photon a photon?" is a different type of question than "When does a photon cause certain effects?" The second question seems more obviously a question of physics, but the first I think is also explored by saying that the photon has an indefinitely long lifetime. Yes, no?
 
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  • #30
I believe that photons are universal in that they are created or absorbed by all observations - and that otherwise, physics involves photons as mass-energy, information, measurement, geodesics, quanta or light.
 
  • #31
kwestion said:
The American Heritage Science Dictionary:
The subatomic particle that carries the electromagnetic force and is the quantum of electromagnetic radiation. The photon has a rest mass of zero, but has measurable momentum, exhibits deflection by a gravitational field, and can exert a force. It has no electric charge, has an indefinitely long lifetime, and is its own antiparticle.​
The word "particle" in this definition seems to trip a lot of people up including myself, which is one reason why I wanted to involve the FAQ's commentary on that word.
Infact the word "particle" doesn't necessarily imply "moving corpuscle", in my opinion. Furthermore, the fact a photon "exhibits deflection by a gravitational field" it's just a speculation, made on the fact that light is really gravitationally deflected but on the assumption that light is made of moving corpuscles which should be the photons.
Physics speaks of energy, waves, fields, force, etc., not just nuggets of matter as I think you'll agree, so I'm not sure what you meant by restricting to a physical entity. According to the above, the photon "is" the quantum of electromagnetic radiation.
I intended to refer to the fact that physics studies measurable entities (directly or through their properties) and not something else. So, this given, what does "the quantum of electromagnetic radiation" mean, in your opinion?
 
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  • #32
lightarrow said:
the word "particle" doesn't necessarily imply "moving corpuscle", in my opinion.
Okay. Among the options are propogation and some other fun ideas. Do we agree though, that physicists speak of photons at least changing locations at speed c? This may be tricky since it'd be hard to prove sameness, but maybe that's where the statement about indefinitely long lifetime comes in. I think sameness from point A to point B is assumed. Am I on your wavelength?
lightarrow said:
what does "the quantum of electromagnetic radiation" mean, in your opinion?
Uhm, errh... I think it refers to the idea of the e/m , or its energy, being sort of packaged, and not loosely continuous, giving an all-or-nothing proposition--you get the whole quantity of energy or none of it. Beyond that, for me, there seems to be freedom in meaning, but without mass.
 
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  • #33
kwestion said:
the word "particle" doesn't necessarily imply "moving corpuscle", in my opinion.
Okay. Among the options are propogation and some other fun ideas. Do we agree though, that physicists speak of photons at least changing locations at speed c? This may be tricky since it'd be hard to prove sameness, but maybe that's where the statement about indefinitely long lifetime comes in. I think sameness from point A to point B is assumed. Am I on your wavelength?
It indeed seems physicists talk about photons in those terms, yes. For what I understand, however, we can only say: "a photon was generated in A, after some time a photon is detected in B"; what happens in between is not clear to me.
what does "the quantum of electromagnetic radiation" mean, in your opinion?
Uhm, errh... I think it refers to the idea of the e/m , or its energy, being sort of packaged, and not loosely continuous, giving an all-or-nothing proposition--you get the whole quantity of energy or none of it. Beyond that, for me, there seems to be freedom in meaning, but without mass.
Yes, but how do you relate this concept to something measurable? Which is the quantization that you can measure? That of the EM field or that of the interaction between EM field and matter?
 
  • #34
lightarrow said:
It indeed seems physicists talk about photons in those terms, yes. For what I understand, however, we can only say: "a photon was generated in A, after some time a photon is detected in B"; what happens in between is not clear to me.?
Okay, it sounds like physicists speak in terms of a sort of travel, but you are leaving the possibilities between A and B wide open. Is that the jist?
lightarrow said:
Yes, but how do you relate this concept to something measurable? Which is the quantization that you can measure? That of the EM field or that of the interaction between EM field and matter?
I think your point is that we need an interaction with something to give us information. I'll go along with that.
I might point out that the interaction can also be with the photon's antiparticle, and it can be an interaction followed by a prolonged period of time "reacting" with empty space. So we at least have some clues/measurements that go beyond interaction with traditional matter alone.
I'm thinking I'm getting and accepting your point. I guess you're emphasizing that we only know what we measure, and I'm thinking that the measurements are only clues to what the pure thing is between the measurements. I don't necessarily see a conflict in the ideas so far.
 
  • #35
kwestion said:
It indeed seems physicists talk about photons in those terms, yes. For what I understand, however, we can only say: "a photon was generated in A, after some time a photon is detected in B"; what happens in between is not clear to me.
Okay, it sounds like physicists speak in terms of a sort of travel, but you are leaving the possibilities between A and B wide open. Is that the jist?
Sorry, don't understand "jist".
I think your point is that we need an interaction with something to give us information. I'll go along with that.
I might point out that the interaction can also be with the photon's antiparticle, and it can be an interaction followed by a prolonged period of time "reacting" with empty space. So we at least have some clues/measurements that go beyond interaction with traditional matter alone.
I'm lost, here.
I'm thinking I'm getting and accepting your point. I guess you're emphasizing that we only know what we measure, and I'm thinking that the measurements are only clues to what the pure thing is between the measurements. I don't necessarily see a conflict in the ideas so far.
Mmmh, I would talk about "clues to what the pure thing is between the measurements" if we could analyze the "pure thing" properties through another kind of measurement, otherwise, how would you prove that such a "pure thing" really exist and it's not a mere speculation?
 
  • #36
lightarrow said:
Sorry, don't understand "jist".
I meant "gist"
lightarrow said:
I'm lost, here.
I was mentioning that photon interaction with matter isn't the only tool that we have. We can add time and distance to the study. We can also add motion of the source and detector to the study. We can also try to study the effects of photon-photon interaction. Introducing these types of non-matter variables offers another kind of measurement as touched on below:
lightarrow said:
Mmmh, I would talk about "clues to what the pure thing is between the measurements" if we could analyze the "pure thing" properties through another kind of measurement, otherwise, how would you prove that such a "pure thing" really exist and it's not a mere speculation?
How would I prove that the pure thing, a photon, exists without speculation? I think the process is that we first observe effects a,b,c,d, then we notice a correlation among observations and assume that there was a cause for it. We then simply name the mystery cause a "photon".

As a bonus, nothing stops us from deriving plausible models of the photon that predict future findings. I think we agree that the existence of those extended models might be difficult to prove. I also have a beef with the layman's model which I think causes confusion in communication and perception, but I guess we have to start somewhere.
 
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  • #37
At least one philosopher, Bas van Fraassen, believes that only things we can "perceive" with the unaided senses are real. I don't know if he would include our ability to "see" the photon in that category.
 
  • #38
kwestion said:
Sorry, don't understand "jist".
I meant "gist".
Ah, ok, then yes, that's the gist.
I was mentioning that photon interaction with matter isn't the only tool that we have. We can add time and distance to the study. We can also add motion of the source and detector to the study. We can also try to study the effects of photon-photon interaction.
The experimental prove of a quantized interaction between tho light beams, would infact convince me much more of the real existence of the EM field quantization.
Introducing these types of non-matter variables offers another kind of measurement as touched on below:

How would I prove that the pure thing, a photon,
No, the "pure thing" you have in mind, in my opinion, it's not the photon, it's the "moving corpuscle of light" carrying the quantized energy. The photon is the quantized interaction between EM field and matter and so not necessarily such a moving corpuscle.
exists without speculation? I think the process is that we first observe effects a,b,c,d, then we notice a correlation among observations and assume that there was a cause for it. We then simply name the mystery cause a "photon".
First, let's give, as I said, the correct name to this mystery cause you want to discuss: "moving corpuscle of light carrying the quantized energy". That said, why can't I say that there are no such moving corpuscle of light, but just an electromagnetic wave which interacts with matter in a way that the exchanged energy is quantized?
As a bonus, nothing stops us from deriving plausible models of the photon that predict future findings. I think we agree that the existence of those extended models might be difficult to prove. I also have a beef with the layman's model which I think causes confusion in communication and perception, but I guess we have to start somewhere.
 
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  • #39
Zapper,

can you really compare water with photons ?...


VE
 
  • #40
Now here is where my headache starts :)

Is a photon a defined 'point' at all times traveling in spacetime.
Or is it just a probability, 'materializing' as we measure it.

That is, our sun 'throws' out photons and as i look up on it those will hit me in time.
Or the sun make it possible for photons to exist and my interaction with this probability according to my eyes orientation and existence allows the interaction to be.

I have to admit that I prefere the first myself.
 
  • #41
Don't ever use Wikipedia. Grab some textbooks instead.
 
  • #42
Shackleford?
If you're referring to my question :)
Didn't use no Wikipedia, does 'many paths' sound familiar to you?
Feynman?
//advancingphysics .i op . org/previous/wb/teacher/ManyPathsandEM.pdf

and this too perhaps
//www . overcomingbias . com/2008/04/feynman-paths.html
 
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  • #43
lightarrow said:
the "pure thing" you have in mind, in my opinion, it's not the photon, it's the "moving corpuscle of light" carrying the quantized energy.
What I want to convey by the "pure thing" is the definition of photon posted in #31. If I stray from that, I want to reel myself back in. I really don't like summarizing it as a moving corpuscle. I think corpuscle gives imagery that just doesn't seem to work well.
lightarrow said:
The photon is the quantized interaction between EM field and matter and so not necessarily such a moving corpuscle. [...] That said, why can't I say that there are no such moving corpuscle of light, but just an electromagnetic wave which interacts with matter in a way that the exchanged energy is quantized?
I think this brings us back to an earlier topic. That stance is reasonable and I think it may have been examined in the BKS model. My limited understanding of that model is that it proposed that matter regulated the quantum effects of light. It was eventually ruled out in favor of the e/m itself having the quantum properties. I'm just addressing the quantization topic here.

It sounds like neither of us have much use for the imagery of a moving corpuscle. Heck, I don't even know what is meant by that. Do you understand it to be a requirement of a photon? The definition uses the word particle, but I'm all over the FAQ when it says its not your normal "particle". There's also a zero-ness to this particle that might not make it as challenging as the normal particle. I mean if it has zero (rest) mass and no discernable size, then that seems pretty close to a non-corpuscle to me. This seems to leave e/m, a scant particle, and some other properties.
 
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  • #44
Yes, but it has momentum and obeys gravity.
Doesn't that mean that there has to be something there?

And if we say that photons are some kind of 'probability focus' that change 'location' over 'time'
(Yeah, I know, a lot of ''''':)
Then what would 'time' be?
 
  • #45
kwestion said:
What I want to convey by the "pure thing" is the definition of photon posted in #31. If I stray from that, I want to reel myself back in. I really don't like summarizing it as a moving corpuscle. I think corpuscle gives imagery that just doesn't seem to work well.
In that definition:

"The subatomic particle that carries the electromagnetic force and is the quantum of electromagnetic radiation. The photon has a rest mass of zero, but has measurable momentum, exhibits deflection by a gravitational field, and can exert a force. It has no electric charge, has an indefinitely long lifetime, and is its own antiparticle."

something is missing: the photon's spin and the fact that "quantum of electromagnetic radiation" refers to quantization of the energy; furthermore, as I wrote, I don't think it's correct to state that the photon "exhibits deflection by a gravitational field"; to state something like that we shoude have a valid and accepted quantum theory of gravity, and we still don't have it.
I think this brings us back to an earlier topic. That stance is reasonable and I think it may have been examined in the BKS model. My limited understanding of that model is that it proposed that matter regulated the quantum effects of light. It was eventually ruled out in favor of the e/m itself having the quantum properties. I'm just addressing the quantization topic here.
Wikipedia says:

<<Nevertheless, all semiclassical theories were refuted definitively in the 1970s and 1980s by elegant photon-correlation experiments.[33] Hence, Einstein's hypothesis that quantization is a property of light itself is considered to be proven.>>

but I'm not sure if all physicists would agree on it.
It sounds like neither of us have much use for the imagery of a moving corpuscle. Heck, I don't even know what is meant by that. Do you understand it to be a requirement of a photon? The definition uses the word particle, but I'm all over the FAQ when it says its not your normal "particle". There's also a zero-ness to this particle that might not make it as challenging as the normal particle. I mean if it has zero (rest) mass and no discernable size, then that seems pretty close to a non-corpuscle to me. This seems to leave e/m, a scant particle, and some other properties.
I have the same concerns.
Some times ago I made a computation, sincerely don't know if it was really correct, about a simply elastic collision between two particles, one of which initially stationary with mass M and the other relativistic with mass m which I then made go to zero, because I was trying to understand if a photon could be thought of as an "ordinary" particle with negligible mass at least for what concern the Compton effect; the resultant energies were different from what results from the Compton Scattering. This is one of the reasons I stll have no idea of how photons can be thought of.
 
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