Jd0g33 said:
I might be asking a question who's answer is way beyond my level but ill give it a shot. In QED, an electric or magnetic field is described in terms of exchanged photons, right? But if a photon itself is made of electric and magnetic fields... a paradox to my ill-informed brain.
Particles are vibrations in quantum fields. The fundamental "stuff" is the quantum field.
Imagine a vacuum, a complete empty space, maybe far out in space somewhere. This empty space is still filled with quantum fields. That is a quantum field for photons, one for the electrons, one for the quarks, one for the Higgs particles, one for each fundamental particle.
In vacuum all these quantum fields are not excited, but due their quantum nature are not completely still either, they vibrate very little by themselves. But the strength of E-M field in vacuum
on average is zero.
When you interact with a quantum field, e.g. move two electric charged bodies in the vacuum, you excite a quantum field above its vacuum state. Depending on how long-lived these excitations/ vibrations are, you call them particles.
So always, when you through interaction excite/ vibrate a quantum field, in vacuum or not, and these excitations exist long enough in space and time to be measured, you have particles.