T.Roc said:
A laser is possible because of photon/photon resonance. An interaction capable of resonance, must also be capable of dissonance.
Your assertion that photons interact with one another in a laser is incorrect. You cannot get a laser without a lasing medium, you need atoms to facilitate the interactions that would lead to lasing. It is the
atoms that posess resonances, not photons.
T.Roc said:
This is why some colors reflect certain colors, and absorb others.
TRoc
What do you mean by 'colour'. Do you mean the frequency of a photon, or the absorption spectra of a particluar substance? Objects appear to have colour because they absorb certain frequencies and reflect others, this property is entirely dependant on the characteristics of the atoms/molecules and not the photons.
T.Roc said:
This is incorrect, all lasers posess a finite linewidth, some lasers (supercontinuum lasers) have linewidths that can cover a large portion of the frequency spectrum.
T.Roc said:
Another example? A quote from Encyclopedia Brittanica:
"In addition to saturation spectroscopy, there are a number of other techniques that are capable of obtaining Doppler-free spectra. An important example is two-photon spectroscopy, another form of spectroscopy that was made possible by the high intensities available with lasers. All these techniques rely on the relative Doppler shift of counterpropagating beams to identify the correct resonance frequency and have been used to measure spectra with extremely high accuracy. These techniques, however, cannot eliminate another type of Doppler shift. "
This does not support any of your arguments. Two-photon spectroscopy works essentially because of what happens to an atom when two counterpropagating photons are incident upon it at the same time. Again, this has nothing to do with photons interacting with one another, it is photons interacting with atoms.
There are certain interactions termed photon-photon interactions, however they
all occur inside media, because they rely on the presence of a nonlinear polarisation. So called 'photon-photon' interactions also require the presence of an atom, so technically, it is a 'photon-photon-atom' interaction.
I am not aware of any interaction that occurs between two photons, and only two photons.
Claude.