DaleSpam said:
At the atomic level, as in the OP, they most certainly do exist.
A macroscopic object has a lot of internal degrees of freedom where kinetic energy can be turned into internal energy of one form or another. An atom has relatively few internal degrees of freedom, and those degrees of freedom are generally quantized. If the collision does not change one of those quantized degrees of freedom (as many do not) then it is perfectly elastic.
The atom has lots of degrees of freedom. If it didn't radio waves couldn't pass through walls, and light couldn't pass through solids or liquids.
Also you wouldn't be able to create radio broadcasts at the frequency of your choosing.
And I think you're confusing some principles. Light is not simply emitted and absorbed in atomic spectral lines - it's also created through inter-atomic collisions. For line spectra it's limited degrees of freedom. For inter-atomic collisions, it's unlimited degrees of freedom - well the limit is - I'm not actually sure - the top is obviously particle collisons at relativistic speeds - the bottom would be glancing slow collisions creating photons with wavelengths miles long or more even.
Here let's look at a graph of spectra just for the heck of it. If photon emission could only occur on the spectral lines, the world would be a very dark place. And there wouldn't be much choice of frequencies to broadcast radio on.
Your reasoning based on classical macroscopic objects simply doesn't apply to quantum mechanical situations.
Quantum, Smwantum. Dragging something into the realm of the quantum is often the trick used when someone's understanding is incoherent. Here have a wave equation, a delta, and a squiggle, ψ Δ ζ and a snake ∫...two snakes about to fight ∫ ζ
At a certain level atoms can be treated as semi-classical. And the electrostatic force between atoms as classical liquid or better a jelly that wobbles. For certain purposes the classical rules breakdown - but for others they don't.
Transmitting a radio single from an antenna can be explained as simply wobbling the atoms in the antenna at the desired frequency.
When it comes to the conservation of linear momentum, your reasoning is mistaking abstract objects for real classical macroscopic ones.
So, you are wrong. Or maybe you're in a superposition of correctness, both simultaneously right and wrong. Or maybe in another one of the multi-verses you're right and I'm wrong.