ZapperZ said:
But vanesch, we have gone through this before. First of all, without invoking any complex scenario such as the stochastic classical E&M plus the "quantization of matter", the classical EM wave cannot explain all of the observation of the photoelectric effect. Secondly, the introduction of "matter is quantized" is rather vague. The conduction electrons (if that is what you meant by quantized matter, though I don't see how that would be relevant), which are the ones involved in the standard photoelectric effect, are not in any quantized state at all. The conduction band is continuous, and so is the photocurrent being detected, which after all, is all we care about and can talk about.
I think you missed my point (again - last time we also had this discussion). I'm absolutely not implying that classical EM is somehow correct. I'm only indicating that setting up a simple photo electric effect experiment in a freshman lab, in which the only thing one really measures is the onset of the photocurrent from a certain stopping voltage onward, and that this threshold voltage is rather independent on the intensity of the EM beam, BY ITSELF, together with a simple argument about "how the stopping voltage should be somehow a function of intensity in a classical model" from which ought to follow that ANY CLASSICAL MODEL based upon a non-quantized EM field is now definitively falsified is AN ERRONEOUS FORM OF REASONING. It doesn't mean that the conclusion is right or wrong, but the approach is false.
First of all, it is very difficult to claim that ANY classical model (no matter how involved) should have a reaction to an EM field which ejects particles at high EM intensities with low frequency (which is the core of the argument). As I said, it is only in simplistic models (individual electrons, linked with breakable springs or something of the kind) that this is evidently true. There could simply be a mechanism which acts as a high pass filter and which preferably converts EM radiation into heat below a cutoff frequency in a complicated mechanical system. There's no way to exclude such a thing a priori in a mechanical system with so many degrees of freedom. If you allow for JUST ANY model (and you have to, if you pretend to prove that ALL OF THEM must fail), fairly complicated dynamics is possible. So instead of making a totally unsubstantiated claim, I think it is better to keep one to what has ACTUALLY been demonstrated with said experiment.
Next, your argument about the conduction band doesn't hold IMO. The fermi level of the conduction band is still negative as compared to a free electron. So applying Fermi's golden rule using classical EM on such a quantum system, will only transport electrons hv up, and if this hv is below the dE needed to get free, it will not result in a free state, but rather in a population "higher up" in the conduction band. If the thermal phenomena which restore the Fermi distribution are fast enough, then the build-up of this population will be neglegible, so that "a second step" is almost impossible. And all this, using the band model of a simple solid, but a classical EM potential (using Fermi's golden rule). So this model can ALSO explain the onset of the photocurrent from a certain potential onward, which is a proof that not all (semi)-classical models are ruled out BY JUST THIS SINGLE EXPERIMENT, and hence that all reasoning that tries to show this, must be erroneous.
Classical EM can explain the standard photoelectric effect, then I'd say why hasn't it able to explain ALL of the photoemission observation beyond just the highly simplified photoelectric effect. Remember, as I've pointed out before, the standard photoelectric effect is nothing more than a highly special case where a bunch of things are ignored.
True, but then the REASONING that SIMPLY THIS EXPERIMENT invalidates all classical models is an erroneous reasoning: you have to bring in a lot of other results, and you have to consider a lot more possibilities for the classical models. So the CORRECT reasoning is simply, that after a lot of experimenting, and after a lot of modeling, the scientific community came to the conclusion that they never managed to get a satisfactory classical model explaining ALL experimental results, while the quantum model does so easily. And we come to what I think is important to stress: that the quantum model works WELL ; not that the classical model DOESN'T work. This is NOT demonstrated with the simple photoelectric effect, and the naive toy model. The only thing that is demonstrated by only that experiment is that ONE SINGLE NAIVE classical model DOESN'T WORK.
A theory that can explain a whole lot more than a special case is always accepted as being the more accurate description. To continue to cling on the classical scenario is like claiming that to the Bohr model is valid just because it works for the hydrogen atom. Should we just continue to tell the students to hang on to the planetary model of the atom just because it works for ONE special, highly simplified case?
No, that's not what I'm saying. The problem is that this one special, highly simplified case has been singled out as PROOF. THIS is false.
Note that we are ignoring the abundance of experimental observations of the validity of the photon model from various EPR-type experiments and the which-way experiments. Not a single one of those experimental results have even hinted at any contradiction to such a scenario. So what is being taught is correct as of now. The students are not being taught something that is wrong. To me, considering I remembered as a student how difficult and confusing all of these new information were, it is the most pedagogically sound technique to do.
Absolutely, but as you say yourself, it is a WHOLE HOST OF EXPERIMENTS and a whole host of theoretical reasoning which made people come to this conclusion ; it is not JUST this single freshman lab which did so. So one mustn't claim that, SOLELY BASED UPON THIS SINGLE RESULT, that the EM field MUST be quantized.
To put it in carricature: drop a big stone, and drop a small stone. Both fall at about the same rate. This shows that the Ptolomean model of the solar system is erroneous, and that the sun is the center of the solar system, and not the earth...
Clearly the conclusion is correct. There are myriads of observations which confirm this without doubt. It would be silly to teach the Ptolomean system in all its detail to students. But the experiment with the stones didn't show this. The experiment with the stones illustrated something valid about Newton's laws, and are one building block in setting up Newtonian mechanics. We should stress, with such an experiment, that Newton's laws can predict this. But we shouldn't, by erroneous reasoning, claim that THIS experiment has invalidated beyond doubt, once and for all, the Ptolomean view on the solar system.
EDIT: again, the question is pedagogical. What's the use of pedagogy in physics ? The use is 1) to teach students a bunch of material which they have to know and be able to apply 2) to teach them the correct ways of reasoning in science: to be critical, open to alternatives, not be gullible, etc...
Well, if you teach them about the photo-electric effect, and show them how it can be explained using the quantization of the EM field, then they have gained something on 1). If you show them an erroneous reasoning about how this rules out classical models, then you have HURT 2).