Imparcticle
- 572
- 4
Are sine waves the waves that are theoretically deemed to be the waves [naturally] emitted by all matter? Or am I getting them confused with something else?
Sine waves are not emitted by all matter; they are mathematical constructs used to represent certain types of physical waves. The discussion highlights that while sine and cosine waves can describe waveforms through Fourier analysis, elementary particles like photons do not travel as sine waves. Instead, the behavior of photons is better understood through quantum mechanics and Maxwell's electrodynamics, which allow for various waveforms depending on the field strength. The conversation emphasizes the distinction between mathematical representations and physical reality.
PREREQUISITESPhysicists, electrical engineers, and students of quantum mechanics seeking to understand the relationship between mathematical waveforms and physical phenomena.
No!zhana said:Is it suggested that elementar photons travel and look like sine waves?
The question is again on the "edge" of regularity.Quantum physics description of wave package of a photon ,as always,includes oscillatory terms,but photon locallity being the problem .So attenuation.Wave function even admits the interpretation photon potentialy spreads over entire universe.Imparcticle said:So are sine waves emitted by all matter or not?
No. Sine waves are mathematical objects. Matter is physical. So your question makes no sense. A sensible question would be: are such-and-such type of physical waves accurately represented as sine waves?Imparcticle said:So are sine waves emitted by all matter or not?