Carrock
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Hard to find a reference, but I've seen claims that photons experience change in some way, but time does not pass for them. It's usually harder to understand when time is implicitly avoided but a vaguely similar concept is used.PeterDonis said:How so?Carrock said:Saying that the concept of "time" does not apply to them' also often leads to incorrect inferences
Often isn't necessarily. There's no problem e.g. in moving a clock downwards to compensate for gravitational redshift from a lower clock to compare them.PeterDonis said:It is if you want to analyze actual experiments, since in actual experiments the energy relative to the source is often different from the energy relative to the detector.Carrock said:I was simply trying to indicate that it's never necessary to have photons' energy, momentum etc change.
PeterDonis said:Carrock said:Since an object can always be chosen such that the absorbed photon is in the same state as when it was emitted
No, this is not correct. For example, if you are here on Earth, and you are looking at photons coming from a distant galaxy, you don't get to choose the state of motion of the source or the detector.
Without doing the maths, I'd think a suitable particle at CERN could be created as a detector with an appropriate state of motion.
I'm rather rusty on 4-momentum and 4-velocity as you may have guessed...PeterDonis said:Also, your use of the word "state" is incorrect here. The energy of the photon is an inner product of the photon's 4-momentum and the object's 4-velocity; that's not just a matter of the photon's state. (And the photon's state is not just its 4-momentum; it also includes polarization, which doesn't affect the photon's energy relative to an object, but does affect other measurements.)
However I don't see my imprecision/error negating anything else in this post. From your quote, an object with a suitable 4-velocity is all that's required.
From https://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/physics/laureates/2015/advanced-physicsprize2015.pdfPeterDonis said:Do you have a reference for this?Carrock said:A particle's state 'really' evolving during flight, like a neutrino, is generally regarded as proof mass is associated with it.
Do you have a reference refutingThe discovery that neutrinos can convert from one flavour to another and therefore have non-
zero masses is a major milestone for elementary particle physics.
More precisely, refuting "...an object can always be chosen such that the absorbed photon (and absorber I suppose) is in the same state as when it was emitted."Carrock said:A particle's state 'really' evolving during flight, like a neutrino, is generally regarded as proof mass is associated with it.