maybee a reeealy small probe made of superstrings?
ZapperZ said:
Maybe you'd like to explain how you would determine the magnetic field of a single photon?
Zz.
While the average magnetic field of a photon should be zero, because it is oscillating + to - over time, at some point the field strength is at a maximum (say +) when the electrostatic field strength is a minimum (zero). So at that moment, all the photon's classical energy is contained in the magnetic field (does relativistic mass-energy have a part here? haven't a clue).
Perhaps some sharp-pencilled theoretical physicist could then say, well, infinite field strength doesn't make sense, so the magnetic field of known energy must have some kind of spatial extent at that point in time. Otherwise, if all the magnetic field is concentrated at a single point, the field strength is infinite at that point. Maybe inifinite field strength IS allowed, I don't know.
Since the magentic field strength varies with time, so would the envelope size, I suppose. Equally, so would the electrostatic field strength, although reaching a maximum out of phase with the magnetic field maximum. So it could have and envelope too, maybe different size than magnetic? Dunno.
Perhaps the aperture experiment could be a way of physically looking at the extent of a photon, although you might just wind up with more of a probability envelope because of HUP, dunno
By the way, if a photon enters an aperture traveling along the X-axis, then hits the phosphor screen off the X axis as described by quantum theory, does the re-direction of its path cause it to lose energy? In other words, is the scattering of the photon at the aperture (to describe it in classical terms) perfectly elastic?