exmarine
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Is there any experimental evidence that photons can transmit negative momentum? After all, there is also a negative root: E^2 = (pc)^2 + (mc^2)^2
exmarine said:OK, how about this. Can a photon ever transmit momentum in the opposite direction of its propagation?
Maybe if the body hit by the photon had negative mass (the body would accelerate in the opposite direction of the force on it), but this is just speculation because negative mass doesn't exist.exmarine said:OK, how about this. Can a photon ever transmit momentum in the opposite direction of its propagation?
exmarine said:OK, how about this. Can a photon ever transmit momentum in the opposite direction of its propagation?
Vanadium 50 said:I'm still trying to envision a photon (or, for that matter, anything) moving in one direction, but its momentum pointing opposite.
exmarine said:You guys are way ahead of me, obviously. One of the things that provoked my question was Feynman rambling on and on about all the wondrous things that photons do. For example, “the nucleus keeps its electrons close by, by exchanging photons with its electrons”. I don’t feel like looking up an exact quote right now, but that’s pretty close. Well, doesn’t that require that those exchanging photons transmit negative momentum to produce attractive forces?
Thanks for all the responses.
Guido Diforti said:in Einstein's own words:
"[...]In every elementary process of absorption or emission a momentum of absolute magnitude ## \frac{h \nu}{c} ## is transferred to the molecule "
The momentum is in the direction of the movement of the photon during the absorption and in the opposite direction during emission.