Vorde
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How does the exchange of virtual photons result in an attractive force (for example between a proton and electron)?
Vorde said:How does the exchange of virtual photons result in an attractive force (for example between a proton and electron)?
Bill_K said:Vorde, You're probably visualizing the photons as little bullets that get batted back and forth between the two particles, and every time a photon hits its target, that particle will recoil a little bit, getting pushed back. Not the way it works, of course!
We draw a Feynman diagram, in which particle A emits a photon and particle B later absorbs it. What you need to remember is that this picture is not a literal snapshot of what's happening - it's more abstract. You can draw a Feynman diagram either in position space (x) or in momentum space (p). In classical mechanics you can specify both x and p at the same time, but in quantum mechanics you have to choose one or the other.
Specifically if you draw particle A to the left of particle B, that does not say anything about the momentum of the photon that's exchanged. It can push to the left or to the right, either one. So our classical instinct that A must be pushing B away leads us astray.
Ok fine. That's more than I can say! If you'd asked for example, "How does the exchange of virtual photons result in an attractive (or repulsive) force" I'd have known that you weren't thinking in terms of billiard balls. Coulomb repulsion is just as hard to explain as attraction.i'm aware of all the quantum intricacies.