marlon
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But, again you chose NOT to answer them. You are looking less credible by every post you make. Anyways, ...Proof.Beh said:Repetitive like always, But,
This is a blunt violation against the basic principles of the standard model (read the webpage and check the references at the end of the article). You use laser physics later on to make your point but doesn't it strike you as being strange that you violate the very theoretical model that explains all this laser phenomenae correctly ?1- A photon can not be a point particle.
Newsflash, maybe that's because photons INTERACT with matter (atoms, phonons, etc) ?Because when light of a lamp glints to a sheet of iron, we won't see any affect of photons and lighting under it. While we know that there are free spaces among moleculs of iron that can be sufficent for crossing the infinity number of these points (photons) that it is a paradox.
Huh ? What do you mean by propagator ? Photons are the constituent particles of the laser. As a matter of fact "a laser" is just a bunch of photons with specific properties. I challenge you to show me ANY publication that explains the laser (from population inversion on...) using the photon size concept. In return, i will give you plenty of references where they DON'T :If we assume that a photon is a point particle then the propagator (for example a laser) must propagates infinity number of photons in an arbitrary time interval that it is an unreal imagination.
Applied Physics B: Lasers and Optics (ISSN 0946-2171)
IEEE Journal of Lightwave Technology (ISSN 0733-8724)
IEEE Journal of Quantum Electronics (ISSN 0018-9197)
IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Quantum Electronics (ISSN 1077-260X)
IEEE Photonics Technology Letters
Journal of the Optical Society of America B: Optical Physics (ISSN 0740-3224)
Laser Focus World (ISSN 0740-2511)
Optics Letters (ISSN 0146-9592)
Photonics Spectra (ISSN 0731-1230)
The Nobel Prize in Physics 1966 Presentation Speech by Professor Ivar Waller. Retrieved 1 January 2007.
Gould, R. Gordon (June 1959). "The LASER, Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation". The Ann Arbor Conference on Optical Pumping.
Gould's conference presentation and the public introduction of the term laser are mentioned in:
Chu, Steven; and Townes, Charles (2003). "Arthur Schawlow", in ed. Edward P. Lazear,: Biographical Memoirs, vol. 83, National Academy of Sciences, p. 202. ISBN 0-309-08699-X.
G.P. Karman, G.S. McDonald, G.H.C. New, J.P. Woerdman, "Fractal modes in unstable resonators", Nature Vol. 402, 138 (11 November 1999).
marlon
ps : i am still waiting for that photon-size equation, though.