deepthishan
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Do waves (all types of waves) cause heat (however minimal) when intercepted?
Simon Bridge said:@wdliwei: do you really think that a phonon (a collective vibrational mode) in a condensed-matter lattice exchanges energy like a photon in a vacuum? Don't you think the presence of all those other millions of particles may make a difference? Anyway - how can a single particle have heat - doesn't it just have kinetic energy? Isn't heat the randomized kinetic energy of many particles?
Can you provide an example of a photon scattering from a free electron which shows energy loss due to heat?
There are other kinds of waves too - like the probability waves of quantum wave-mechanics.
Eventually. Some electrons can travel a long way before their energy can be dissipated ... maybe from one end of the lab to the other, maybe across stars. There are scales where "heat" is not a part of a useful model for what happens.In reality, free electrons that are scattering photons bump into other free electrons as they oscillate and transfer their energy to heat in the process.