sophiecentaur said:
@Spinnor
I can sympathise with the fact that you want to relate something 'new' to something 'old' that you already feel you understand but, as has been said already, it really has no relevance to practical reality. On Photon is not related to one Electron because the energy that is transferred between an EM wave and a piece of metal is due to an interaction with the metal as a whole and not to individual atoms.
But you now have your figure of 10
26 Photons per second and you can find a number for the density of free electrons in a metal
in this link. Choose a size and material for your dipole, assume that all the electrons along its length are involved in the emission of the Photons and then you will have the number you want. (I can't be bothered, personally, but have a go, by all means.)
I realize that quantum physics is the law of the land and so would be interested in what quantum field theory has to say about a radiating antenna. In the end some electrons accelerate and some photons are emitted. As you can't be bothered (and I don't blame you, life is too short %^) ) I will try to answer my question below, hopefully any gross errors will be pointed out.
Let λ = 1m, then nu = 3E8 cycles per second. Let the antenna have a length of λ/2, be made of steel, and have a diameter, D, of 5E-3m. The density of free electrons, ρ, is about 1E29 electrons/m^3. The skin effect results in only the electrons in a surface layer, δ, of about 3E-6m being accelerated. The volume of the antenna that gives rise to photons is about,
V = ∏Dδλ/2 ≈ 3.14x5E-3x3E-6x1/2 ≈ 74E-9 ≈ 8E-8m^3
An estimate for the number of electron "involved" in "producing" photons is ρV ≈ 1E29x8E-8m^3 = 8E21 electrons
For this antenna let Vmax = 73 volts, then Imax = V/R = 1amp. The max power is about 73 watts so the average power is about half that, call it 40 watts. Each photon has an energy,
E = hnu ≈ 6E-34x3E8 ≈ 2E-25 J. The number of photons emitted per second is about 40/2E-25 = 2E26 photons per second or
2E26/3E8 ≈ 6.66E17 photons per cycle.
Putting this all together it looks like we have,
8E21 electrons giving rise to 6.66E17 photons per cycle or about
10,000 cycles per electron per photon?
Does that sound reasonable?
Thanks for any help!