Energy conservation for virtual photon

neelakash
Messages
491
Reaction score
1
In introducing the concept of 'virtual photon',Halzen Martin writes (ch#1,P#7) "An ekectron emits a photon (the quantum of electromagnetic field) and as a result,recoils in order to conserve momentum.it is clearly impossible to conserve energy as well,so the emitted photon is definitely not a real photon"...

Why energy and momentum cannot be simoultaneously satisfied?Is momentum conservation is a bit prefferred over energy conservation?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Hi neelakash! :smile:

To simplify the calculations, let's do it in the frame in which the initial and final velocities of the electron are equal and opposite …

change in energy-momentum 4-vector = (E,p) - (E,-p) = (0,2p), which is faster than light (infinitely fast, in this case), and so it can't be the energy-momentum 4-vector of a real photon (or a real anything)! :wink:

(same in any other frame … the change cemes out as (∆E,∆p) with ∆E2 < ∆p2, which isn't allowed)
 
I think the statement that "energy is not conserved for a virtual particle" is not right. The 4-momentum including energy is always conserved as the requirement of Lorentz covariance. This is manifest in Feynman diagrams: when we go from the space-time representation to momentum representation, each vertex contributes a delta function which exactly results in 4-momentum conservation.

The true difference between a real and a virtual particle is, a real particle is on-shell, ie., satisfying Einstein's energy momentum relationship: E^2=m^2+p^2 (with c=1); while a virtual particle does not satisfy this relationship. This difference manifests the difference between classical mechanics and quantum mechanics. A real particle satisfies the classical equation of motion(equivalent to the on-shell condition), so it follows a classical path of motion. A virtual particle is caused by quantum fluctuation, and follows "other paths" in the path integral, so it's off-shell.
 
Hi Phiphy! :smile:

(try using the X2 tag just above the Reply box :wink:)
Phiphy said:
I think the statement that "energy is not conserved for a virtual particle" is not right.

ah, but nobody said that "energy is not conserved for a virtual particle" …

Halzen Martin (ch#1,P#7) says …
it is clearly impossible to conserve energy as well,so the emitted photon is definitely not a real photon

and I said …
tiny-tim said:
… so it can't be the energy-momentum 4-vector of a real photon (or a real anything)!

We're all saying that energy-momentum is not conserved for a real particle. :smile:
Phiphy said:
The true difference between a real and a virtual particle is, a real particle is on-shell, ie., satisfying Einstein's energy momentum relationship: E^2=m^2+p^2 (with c=1); while a virtual particle does not satisfy this relationship.


Nah … the true difference between a real and a virtual particle is, a real particle is real and a virtual particle isn't. :wink:

(the clue's in the name! :biggrin:)
 
Toponium is a hadron which is the bound state of a valance top quark and a valance antitop quark. Oversimplified presentations often state that top quarks don't form hadrons, because they decay to bottom quarks extremely rapidly after they are created, leaving no time to form a hadron. And, the vast majority of the time, this is true. But, the lifetime of a top quark is only an average lifetime. Sometimes it decays faster and sometimes it decays slower. In the highly improbable case that...
I'm following this paper by Kitaev on SL(2,R) representations and I'm having a problem in the normalization of the continuous eigenfunctions (eqs. (67)-(70)), which satisfy \langle f_s | f_{s'} \rangle = \int_{0}^{1} \frac{2}{(1-u)^2} f_s(u)^* f_{s'}(u) \, du. \tag{67} The singular contribution of the integral arises at the endpoint u=1 of the integral, and in the limit u \to 1, the function f_s(u) takes on the form f_s(u) \approx a_s (1-u)^{1/2 + i s} + a_s^* (1-u)^{1/2 - i s}. \tag{70}...

Similar threads

Replies
2
Views
1K
Replies
6
Views
2K
Replies
38
Views
6K
Replies
55
Views
21K
Replies
11
Views
2K
Replies
18
Views
3K
Back
Top