What are the Misconceptions Surrounding Virtual Particles?

In summary: MoreIn summary, the conversation discussed the comparison between the masses of virtual particles and real particles. The concept of virtual particles was clarified to be an abstraction in the perturbative evaluation of S-matrix elements for scattering processes. While there are mentions in some papers of virtual particles becoming real under certain circumstances, it was pointed out that these statements are often just a lingo problem and not an accurate representation of the physics involved. The topic of vacuum emission in cavity QED was also brought up, with the understanding that this system is an open system and the properties of the vacuum state can be manipulated externally. Overall, the conversation emphasized the importance of understanding the context and language used in scientific papers to accurately interpret their findings.
  • #1
Ranku
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Are the typical energies of virtual particles lower than real particles?
 
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  • #2
Ranku said:
Are the typical energies of virtual particles lower than real particles?
That question makes no sense.
 
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  • #3
PeroK said:
That question makes no sense.
Let me re-frame it then: are the masses of virtual particles comparable to real particles?
 
  • #4
Ranku said:
Let me re-frame it then: are the masses of virtual particles comparable to real particles?
Search for "virtual particles mass shell".
 
  • #5
Ranku said:
are the masses of virtual particles comparable to real particles?
If by "mass" you mean the appropriate factor in the Lagrangian, then yes. (Though even here there are complications, since the Lagrangian has to be the "bare" Lagrangian, not the renormalized one.)

If you mean something else by "mass", the question probably is not well-defined.
 
  • #6
PeterDonis said:
If by "mass" you mean the appropriate factor in the Lagrangian, then yes. (Though even here there are complications, since the Lagrangian has to be the "bare" Lagrangian, not the renormalized one.)

If you mean something else by "mass", the question probably is not well-defined.
I mean mass in the sense of magnitude. Since virtual particles can become real upon addition of energy, how big is the gap in energy?
 
  • #7
Ranku said:
[...]Since virtual particles can become real upon addition of energy, [...]
Where do you get this from?
 
  • #8
Ranku said:
I mean mass in the sense of magnitude.
"Magnitude" is much too vague. Magnitude of what?

Ranku said:
Since virtual particles can become real upon addition of energy, how big is the gap in energy?
This is not a valid way of thinking about how virtual particles work.
 
  • #9
dextercioby said:
Where do you get this from?
PeterDonis said:
This is not a valid way of thinking about how virtual particles work.

There are such mentions in these two papers:

1. "Due to the bosonic nature of the photon, increasing the peak intensity through a combination of raising the pulse energy and decreasing the pulse duration will pile up more and more photons within the same finite region of space. In the absence of material, this continues until the vacuum is stressed to the point of breakdown and virtual particles become real."
2. "A quite direct evidence of the existence of such virtual particles is provided by the dynamical Casimir effect (DCE). It predicts that rapid modulations of the boundary conditions of a quantum field induce vacuum amplification effects that result in the creation of real particles out of vacuum fluctuations."
 
  • #10
These seem to be quite strange papers. Can you give the reference? One has to now the context to judge whether the statements make some sense when translated to more careful formulations.

"Virtual particles" are not observable physical objects but abstractions in the perturbative evaluation of S-matrix elements for scattering processes. Depicted by Feynman diagrams they are symbolized by internal lines and stand for propagators of (free) fields. As such virtual particles don't have physical properties, because they are never observables.
 
  • #11
vanhees71 said:
Can you give the reference?
Click on the numbers (1. and 2.), they're hyperlinks.
 
  • #12
Well yes. As expected it's just the typical lingo some people think they have to use to make their papers more exciting. All what's written there is just standard QED. What's described are attempts to demostrate the Schwinger mechanism (creation of electron-positron pairs due to a strong electromagnetic field created with a high-intensity laser aka a coherent state aka a classical electroamgnetic wave; that's far from being vacuum) and Delbrück scattering (elastic scattering of two photons, which is a fourth-order effect of QED).

In paper 2 they use "polaritons", i.e., an in-medium (!) collective state to emit real photons. That's also not something "popping out of the vacuum" but just an in-medium photon-production process. As Einstein said (about theoretical physicists but it seems to apply nowadays as well to experimentalists): "Don't listen to their words but look at their deeds."
 
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  • #14
vanhees71 said:
In paper 2 they use "polaritons", i.e., an in-medium (!) collective state to emit real photons. That's also not something "popping out of the vacuum" but just an in-medium photon-production process. As Einstein said (about theoretical physicists but it seems to apply nowadays as well to experimentalists): "Don't listen to their words but look at their deeds."

To be honest, I disagree. I agree that this is a lingo problem, but I think the problem is not with the authors.

The quantum vacuum is commonly considered as the lowest energy state of whatever your system at hand is. It is quite common that researchers in cosmology, astrophysics or particle physics interpret this to mean the QED vacuum of empty space, but this is usually never the case in any publication outside of particle physics. In many other fields and most prominently in all branches of optics, people commonly have a look at the vacuum of cavity QED which is a significant difference. Most importantly, the system considered in cavity QED is an open system and (in contrast to bare empty space) its properties may be changed externally, e.g. by changing the properties of the cavity investigated. And usually all of the vacuum emission stuff in cavity QED can be traced back to exactly that: people change the system so that the properties of the vacuum state itself become time-dependent. Of course stuff "popping out of the vacuum" is not necessarily too exciting if you are allowed to change the vacuum state (and the system in the vacuum state is of course an open system coupled to another system so the total system consisting of all subsystems is not in the vacuum state), but the authors are quite clear about what they do.

However, of course I agree that such results are somewhat hyped and receive too much attention because usually laymen do not understand cavity QED well enough to realize what kind of vacuum people are talking about.
 
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  • #15
Well, but that's really a lingo problem then. In my field of research (relativistic HI collisions) nobody would call a many-body ground state "vacuum". As I said, as soon as you read the physics paper (not some popular-science covering of its contents) it's clear what's meant.
 
  • #16
Sure, I see that and fully agree that it would be very unintuitive lingo in high-energy physics.

Taking the historical point of view, one can see quite easily where the language separation took place. The 1946 landmark paper by Purcell (well, actually it was rather a brief contribution to conference proceedings and it is reference 1 in the next link I will post) was the first of many papers on how to modify spontaneous emission rates by embedding atoms in a non-standard environment - an effect which has become known as the Purcell effect.

For a description of the modified spontaneous emission one does not have too many knobs to turn. In the simplest picture using Fermi's golden rule, we actually have the transition matrix elements and the density of final states. And it turns out that considering a local density of states of the unoccupied light field modes modified by the environment (cavity, crystal, whatever) works well.

This is obviously highly interesting for other emitters as well ( https://journals.aps.org/prl/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevLett.58.2059 ). Enhanced spontaneous emission is useful for building emitters. Inhibited spontaneous emission is good for building optical memories or other applications that require long lifetimes. Accordingly, it has become quite standard to consider effects that rely on playing around with the local density of states of unoccupied light field modes as "something with vacuum".
 
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  • #17
vanhees71 said:
These seem to be quite strange papers. Can you give the reference? One has to now the context to judge whether the statements make some sense when translated to more careful formulations.

"Virtual particles" are not observable physical objects but abstractions in the perturbative evaluation of S-matrix elements for scattering processes. Depicted by Feynman diagrams they are symbolized by internal lines and stand for propagators of (free) fields. As such virtual particles don't have physical properties, because they are never observables.
They are not directly visible but their effects are. A freely propagating particle is not virtual.
 
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1. What are virtual particles?

Virtual particles are particles that are predicted by quantum field theory to exist in the quantum vacuum. They are not directly observable, but their effects can be measured through their interactions with other particles.

2. How do virtual particles relate to energy?

Virtual particles are constantly popping in and out of existence in the vacuum, and this process requires energy. This energy is known as the "energy of virtual particles" and is a fundamental aspect of quantum field theory.

3. Can virtual particles be created or destroyed?

Virtual particles are not physical particles, so they cannot be created or destroyed in the same way as regular particles. They are constantly appearing and disappearing, but their overall energy remains constant.

4. How is the energy of virtual particles different from regular particles?

The energy of virtual particles is different from regular particles because they do not have a well-defined mass or momentum. They exist only as fluctuations in the quantum vacuum and do not follow the same rules as particles in the macroscopic world.

5. What is the significance of virtual particles in the study of energy?

Virtual particles play a crucial role in understanding the behavior of energy at the quantum level. They are necessary for explaining various phenomena, such as the Casimir effect and Hawking radiation, and are an essential component of our current understanding of the universe.

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