Understanding Light: Questions & Answers

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In summary: Is light from a reflective surface like a mirror really absorbed and re-emitted or is it just reflected? Is any energy lost in the process of re-emitting light, i.e. is some of the energy of the absorbed photon turned into heat, or is it a complete conversion? Is their any way to modulate the amount/wavelength of photons re-emitted? Do ionized atoms emit different wavelengths than their electrically neutral counterparts would? Does light in the form of photons/waves lose energy as it propagates through space and if so how?Re-emitting light is definitely happening. Some energy is lost in the process, but it's not a complete conversion. There is also some
  • #1
GRB 080319B
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I have plethora of questions about light:

1.) I understand that light is created when the electrons in an atom jump to a higher level and fall back down to their ground state. When light is emitted, is it emitted orthogonal to the electron or at the angle of absorption? How is light emitted orthogonal to the nucleus when the electron jumps and falls back orthogonal to the nucleus? Isn't light emitted perpendicular to the direction that the electron jumps? Or are the electrons not orbiting parallel to the nucleus? Do photons/light waves propagate outward in all directions, e.g. a ripple in a pond, or unidirectionally?

2.) Is light from a reflective surface like a mirror really absorbed and re-emitted or is it just reflected? Is any energy lost in the process of re-emitting light, i.e. is some of the energy of the absorbed photon turned into heat, or is it a complete conversion? Is their any way to modulate the amount/wavelength of photons re-emitted? Do ionized atoms emit different wavelengths than their electrically neutral counterparts would? Does light in the form of photons/waves lose energy as it propagates through space and if so how?

3.) Light is described as being an electromagnetic wave, with electric and magnetic components. I understand these components come from electrons having magnetic and electric properties. How exactly do the magnetic and electric properties of electrons merge to form electromagnetic waves? Is the electric component caused by the electrons falling from higher energy levels? How is the magnetic component created? How does an electromagnetic wave contain both a magnetic and electric component within one wave? How do current, magnetic and electric fields affect light or produce it, and conversely, how does light affect said fields and current?

4.) I am familiar with seeing light shown like this: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/a1/Light-wave.svg"
Is there any way to visualize light in 3D instead of 2D cross sections? Is light a standing wave and does it contain a definite beginning and end point on the wave (does it have a definite length, not wavelength)?
How does light get polarized in the first place, and into circular and elliptical angles? Does the amplitude and intensity of light correspond to the amplitude of the individual photon/wave or is it a property of the sum of the photons/waves of the light?

5.) I've also seen light shown as loops of electric lines of force: http://www.colorado.edu/physics/PhysicsInitiative/Physics2000.03.99/microwaves/images/fig10.jpg"
I am confused as to how the loop correalates to a wave and why it is expanding. Is the wave increasing in size and if so how?

I am struggling to visualize how all these processes are occurring to create light and would appreciate any help. Thank you.
 
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  • #2
GRB 080319B said:
... and does it contain a definite beginning and end point on the wave (does it have a definite length, not wavelength)?

To re-phrase this question: Is light always emitted as a single photon/wave packet with a discrete wavelength or can it be emitted as a continuous wave, e.g. a sine curve.

A few additional questions:
Can light be generated from free electrons and if so can it be generated by a stream of electrons, e.g. electrons flowing through power cords? With reference to the double-slit experiment, how do the two light beams interact with each other to form the interference pattern? If the light is propagating in one direction through the slit, how does it end up expanding like a ripple and causing the interference pattern? Does this have to do with the angle that the photons are moving at relative to when they enter the slits? Also, I've heard that certain wavelengths are not allowed, and that only round numbers of wavelengths can be produced. Is this true, and if so, does it have to do with how the electrons are producing the light waves?
 
  • #3
GRB 080319B said:
1.) I understand that light is created when the electrons in an atom jump to a higher level and fall back down to their ground state. When light is emitted, is it emitted orthogonal to the electron or at the angle of absorption? How is light emitted orthogonal to the nucleus when the electron jumps and falls back orthogonal to the nucleus? Isn't light emitted perpendicular to the direction that the electron jumps? Or are the electrons not orbiting parallel to the nucleus? Do photons/light waves propagate outward in all directions, e.g. a ripple in a pond, or unidirectionally?

These questions make sense only with the Bohr's model. Since Bohr's model is mostly false, I wouldn't waste time on trying to get answers to precisely these questions. Of course we could try to replace these with better questions though, about the same topic :smile: It is difficult to find good info about this. QED is a very advanced topic. I think... I'll say nothing else than that try to proceed with your studies towards more detailed understanding of basic quantum mechanics. Then you will get better picture of what you are trying to understand.

2.) Is light from a reflective surface like a mirror really absorbed and re-emitted or is it just reflected?

Since photons are electrically neutral, there is no other way for matter to interact with them, than absorbing and re-emitting.

Is any energy lost in the process of re-emitting light, i.e. is some of the energy of the absorbed photon turned into heat, or is it a complete conversion? Is their any way to modulate the amount/wavelength of photons re-emitted? Do ionized atoms emit different wavelengths than their electrically neutral counterparts would?

When light is reflected of some surface, there is no energy loss for any particular photon. There is a phenomenon called Compton scattering, where an individual photons have their energies changed, but this needs X-rays to happen. Doesn't happen with visible light.

Does light in the form of photons/waves lose energy as it propagates through space and if so how?

No. At least not in empty flat space time. Photons can lose energy in empty space as result of gravitational red shift though, but otherwise, no.

3.) Light is described as being an electromagnetic wave, with electric and magnetic components. I understand these components come from electrons having magnetic and electric properties. How exactly do the magnetic and electric properties of electrons merge to form electromagnetic waves?

The classical wave emitting with oscillating charges is explained in good books about electromagnetism. You will need to understand multi-variable calculus first. Then you can understand Maxwell's equations, and rest of the task is solving some PDE problem.

Is the electric component caused by the electrons falling from higher energy levels? How is the magnetic component created? How does an electromagnetic wave contain both a magnetic and electric component within one wave? How do current, magnetic and electric fields affect light or produce it, and conversely, how does light affect said fields and current?

This looks like Bohr's model again.

Notice one thing. When you see info about electromagnetic waves, they are usually waves of classical electromagnetic field. This is different thing than the photons, which you will need when dealing with atoms emitting light. Photons cannot be dealt with by classical fields, but you will need QED instead. Again, I'll say nothing else than that this is very advanced topic.

Does the amplitude and intensity of light correspond to the amplitude of the individual photon/wave or is it a property of the sum of the photons/waves of the light?

Individual photons don't have amplitudes of E and B fields. The electromagnetic field merges... hmhm.. somehow (:biggrin:) ...from large number of photons. You will have to understand how to deal with quantum mechanical wave packets in harmonic oscillator (and something else too), in order to understand how classical electromagnetic field can arise from discrete photons. Very, very, advanced stuff!

I am struggling to visualize how all these processes are occurring to create light and would appreciate any help. Thank you.

And you will struggle for a long time! :wink:

My advice is this. Don't forget your questions, but don't get stuck on them too badly either. You need to learn about multi-variable calculus, PDE, Maxwell's equations, Schrödinger's equation first. Them come back to your old problems, and see if they look different.

The unfortunate fact is, that when you find information about these things, the chances are, that this topic is still too difficult even for the authors (as is the case with this post too). Some things, like misunderstandings with the Bohr's model, will probably get clearer soon when you learn quantum mechanics. However, there is always something with QED that doesn't seem to be making sense. It's not a very easy task to understand QED. Good luck on trying.
 
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  • #4
LIght is not exclusively limited to the emission or absorptions of electrons is it? Aren't there other physical processes which generate photons? Collision of matter and antimatter for example?
 
  • #5
Produce an oscillating electric current in an antenna and you get radio waves (lots of very low-energy photons).

Take a beam of high-energy electrons and bend it around a curved path (e.g. in an electron synchrotron) and you get synchrotron radiation. See for example the National Synchrotron Light Source.
 
  • #6
jostpuur said:
You will need to understand multi-variable calculus first. Then you can understand Maxwell's equations, and rest of the task is solving some PDE problem.

jostpuur said:
The electromagnetic field merges... hmhm.. somehow (:biggrin:) ...from large number of photons. You will have to understand how to deal with quantum mechanical wave packets in harmonic oscillator (and something else too), in order to understand how classical electromagnetic field can arise from discrete photons.

jostpuur said:
You need to learn about multi-variable calculus, PDE, Maxwell's equations, Schrödinger's equation first.

jostpuur said:
...that this topic is still too difficult even for the authors... However, there is always something with QED that doesn't seem to be making sense. It's not a very easy task to understand QED.

*suffers mental breakdown...
*recovers

Thank you for your insight. I know now where the discrepancies in my understanding of this topic are. Guess it's time to crack open those quantum mechanics and multi-variable calculus books!
 
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  • #7
GRB 080319B said:
I have plethora of questions about light:

3.) Light is described as being an electromagnetic wave, with electric and magnetic components. I understand these components come from electrons having magnetic and electric properties.

In classical picture the oscillation of a charge without magnetic moment creates an electromagnetic wave that has of course both electric and magnetic components.

The magnetic component of electromagnetic wave is not caused by magnetic proporties of the oscillating charge but it is induced as a result of the change of the Electrig field in time according to the Maxwell equations.
 
  • #8
erastotenes said:
The magnetic component of electromagnetic wave is not caused by magnetic proporties of the oscillating charge but it is induced as a result of the change of the Electrig field in time according to the Maxwell equations.

Or equivalently the magnetic component is produced by the moving charge. The "inducing"-terminology is confusing, but despite it, in the end, all electric and magnetic fields arise from charges.
 
  • #9
jostpuur said:
Or equivalently the magnetic component is produced by the moving charge. The "inducing"-terminology is confusing, but despite it, in the end, all electric and magnetic fields arise from charges.

Yes but for the electromagnetic wave it is not the first term(you mention) but the second term on the right side in the following Maxwell equation that creates the magnetic part in the wave.

curl B = j + dE/dt . (B magnetic field, j electric current, E electric field)

The magnetic field and electric field in electromagnetic wave create each other according to the Maxwell equations leading to propagation of the wave. The charge plays only a role for starting the process.
 
  • #10
jostpuur said:
Individual photons don't have amplitudes of E and B fields. The electromagnetic field merges... hmhm.. somehow (:biggrin:) ...from large number of photons. You will have to understand how to deal with quantum mechanical wave packets in harmonic oscillator (and something else too), in order to understand how classical electromagnetic field can arise from discrete photons. Very, very, advanced stuff!

Hi Jostpuur, the question of how an electromagnetic field "merges" from a large number of photons is one which I am currently struggling with. Can you suggest a good book that discusses this? I have some undergrad in quantum physics (but not much) and a rudimentary knowledge of classical Maxwell waves, Schrodinger's equations (and the psi function therein), partial differential equations, multi-variable calculus, etc. I'm currently reading Feynman's QED, but find it too general and not very informative with respect to my interests. Conversely, I purchased a textbook called "Quantum Mechanics: An Accessible Introduction" by Robert Scherrer, but I find it gets bogged down in too much minutia without providing much info on the relationship between photons, classical EM waves, and wave packets.

Thanks for any advice.
 
  • #11
Usaf Moji said:
Hi Jostpuur, the question of how an electromagnetic field "merges" from a large number of photons is one which I am currently struggling with. Can you suggest a good book that discusses this?

No. :frown: I don't have any sources on this myself. Usually, when you try to find information about this, you hear the usual arguments "that's not relevant, the scattering amplitudes are the observable quantities".

Somebody here, OOO or Demystifier probably, once recommended some book, which had something about wave functional approach to the KG field, but I don't remember what book it was anymore. Perhaps they can tell something. I'm myself currently too busy with other things, but I'm surely returning to QFT studies at some point again.
 
  • #12
You can, however, find information about constructing wave packets in harmonic oscillator, from some QM sources. I asked about them here wave packets that feel harmonic potential and got some useful info. Once you understand what wave packets are in a one dimensional harmonic oscillator, you can easily extend the construction to N-dimensional oscillator. The Klein-Gordon field is basically an infinite dimensional oscillator, so you can make a wave functional packet that describes the time evolution of the field, and the expectation value can be interpreted as the classical field. If the electromagnetic field was merely a four component Klein-Gordon field, then I think it would be simple to handle in the same manner, but unfortunately it is not merely a four component Klein-Gordon field, but instead there's the gauge condition issue. I'm not sure how to deal with the wave functionals of fields with gauge invariance.
 
  • #13
Thanks Jostpuur. Much of this is way over my head and education level, but the book "Quantum Theory" by David Bohm mentioned in that thread looks interesting. I think I'll get me a copy :approve:
 
  • #14
jostpuur said:
Individual photons don't have amplitudes of E and B fields. The electromagnetic field merges... hmhm.. somehow (:biggrin:) ...from large number of photons. You will have to understand how to deal with quantum mechanical wave packets in harmonic oscillator (and something else too), in order to understand how classical electromagnetic field can arise from discrete photons. Very, very, advanced stuff!

This is one of the most widespread misconceptions imo. Each photon has a polarization state and polarization state reflects the phase relation of E and B. Photons are not bulletlike entities. Quants emerge in the theory as the result of field quantization. The difference between quantized fields and classical fields is not that quanta are added in an ad hoc form to the field but the process of field quantization is just writing down E and B as opeartors instead of ordinary complex numbers. This process leads to discrete energy eigenstates of the field. In this picture n photons merely mean that the field is in the n'th energy eigenstate.

Another reason for this misconception is the widely spread statement: "what we experience as the static field is just the result of interaction with large number of virtual photons".

This may be true but this does not mean that "virtual photons are bulletlike entities so that large number of them lead to a classical pressure-like average that we experience as classical field" . On the contrary virtual photons are nothing but longitidunal and timelike propagating solutions of the covariant field equations. The integral over them gives the classic coulomb field. The integral is taken over electromagnetic field.

Thus field is primary and exists at the deepest level. Quanta emerge as a result of the quantization of the field. Quantization is not ad hoc injection of quanta into the theory but just writing down E and B as operators. This is at least how it is in quantized field theories.

Otherwise you could not explain in anyway how a plane radiowave (that is made up of large number of photons in the same direction) excerts a force (transfers momentum) on a charge in the antenna transversal to its propagation direction.
 
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  • #15
GRB 080319B said:
I have plethora of questions about light:

[post=1556816]This post[/post] by rbj does not answer any of your particular questions but I think that you would find it interesting.
 
  • #16
This Richard Feynman lecture (In New Zealand, 1978) courtesy of the Vega Science Trust brilliantly explains the basics of QED, the relation between light and matter, and gives great insights into how light appears to behave to us.
(There's 3 lectures, each lasting 1 and a half hours but they're all well worth watching).

http://www.vega.org.uk/video/subseries/8
 
  • #17
Usaf Moji said:
Hi Jostpuur, the question of how an electromagnetic field "merges" from a large number of photons is one which I am currently struggling with. Can you suggest a good book that discusses this? I have some undergrad in quantum physics (but not much) and a rudimentary knowledge of classical Maxwell waves, Schrodinger's equations (and the psi function therein), partial differential equations, multi-variable calculus, etc. I'm currently reading Feynman's QED, but find it too general and not very informative with respect to my interests. Conversely, I purchased a textbook called "Quantum Mechanics: An Accessible Introduction" by Robert Scherrer, but I find it gets bogged down in too much minutia without providing much info on the relationship between photons, classical EM waves, and wave packets.

Thanks for any advice.

The classical field is best approximated by coherent states. These states are beefed up versions of what are called the same thing in the harmonic oscillator. In that case, you have a displace ground state wavefunction --- but that's actually not the interesting thing. Wikipedia has a fairly good page on coherent states, though I'm not sure if that only from the perspective of having understood most of it first. Once you understand them, look at the basic steps in quantisation of the EM field --- it's quite short and self-contained in most textbooks (the complications only start once you want to account for electrons too).
 
  • #18
GRB... Your questions are usually answered in 1. a course on classical E&M, 2.a course in QM, and then 3.a course in QFT. We're talking close to three years to get the answers you want, all of which then would be easily answered. Yes, your questions are basic, but somewhat hard to answer without considerable grounding in E&M. So, study for awhile; do your homework.
Regards,
Reilly Atkinson
 
  • #19
In case this seemed suspicious, I can clarify. There was no conflict between my post about Gaussian wave packets, and genneth's post about coherent states. The coherent states are Gaussian wave packets. But I'm slightly confused about this

genneth said:
The classical field is best approximated by coherent states. These states are beefed up versions of what are called the same thing in the harmonic oscillator. In that case, you have a displace ground state wavefunction --- but that's actually not the interesting thing.

Sure it is interesting! I don't see how else way could you understand what these coherent states are all about. :confused:

The solutions of one dimensional harmonic oscillator go like this. The Hamilton's operator is

[tex]
H=-\frac{\hbar^2}{2m}\partial_x^2 + \frac{1}{2}kx^2
[/tex]

we define

[tex]
\alpha := \frac{(mk)^{1/4}}{\sqrt{\hbar}}
[/tex]

and the energy eigenstates are given by

[tex]
\psi_n(x) = \sqrt{\frac{\alpha}{\sqrt{\pi}2^n\; n!}} e^{-\alpha^2 x^2/2} H_n(\alpha x).
[/tex]

Now suppose we want to have a localized state at point [itex]\Delta x\in\mathbb{R}[/itex]. The Gaussian wave packet

[tex]
\psi(x) = \frac{\sqrt{\alpha}}{\pi^{1/4}} e^{-\alpha^2 (x-\Delta x)^2/2}
[/tex]

turns out be handy for this purpose. Modifying a little bit what variation explained in the thread wave packets that feel harmonic potential, we get a formula

[tex]
\int\limits_{-\infty}^{\infty} H_n(\alpha x) e^{-\alpha^2 x^2 + A x} dx = \frac{\sqrt{\pi} A^n}{\alpha^{n+1}} e^{A^2/(4\alpha^2)}.
[/tex]

Using this, we can compute the components of the [itex]\psi[/itex] in [itex]\psi_n[/itex]-basis.

[tex]
\langle n|\psi\rangle = \int\limits_{-\infty}^{\infty} \psi_n^*(x)\psi(x)dx = \frac{\alpha}{\sqrt{\pi 2^n\; n!}} e^{-\alpha^2\Delta x^2/2} \int\limits_{-\infty}^{\infty} H_n(\alpha x) e^{-\alpha^2 x^2 + \alpha^2 \Delta x\; x} dx =\frac{\Delta x^n \alpha^n}{\sqrt{2^n\; n!}}
[/tex]

So we can write the state in eigenstate basis like this

[tex]
|\psi\rangle = \sum_{n=0}^{\infty} \frac{\Delta x^n \alpha^n}{\sqrt{2^n\; n!}} |n\rangle
[/tex]

and this is just the coherent state, although [itex]\alpha[/itex] has now a different meaning than what it has in the Wikipedia's article http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coherent_state. It could be there is a mistake somewhere in my calculation... the exponential term is missing... hmmhhmhh...
 
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  • #20
It could be that the mistake density keeps increasing exponentially now, but I'll try to press on anyway. The real Klein-Gordon field, in Fourier space is described by the Lagrange's function

[tex]
L = \int\frac{d^3p}{(2\pi)^3}\big(\frac{1}{2}(\partial_0\phi_p)^2 - \frac{1}{2}(|p|^2 + m^2)\phi_p^2\big)
[/tex]

We can solve the canonical momenta

[tex]
\Pi_p = \frac{\delta L}{\delta(\partial_0\phi_p)} = \frac{1}{(2\pi)^3}\partial_0\phi_p
[/tex]

and write the Hamilton's function for the same system

[tex]
H \;=\; \int d^3p\; \Pi_p \partial_0\phi_p \;-\; L \;=\; \int d^3p\Big(\frac{(2\pi)^3}{2}\Pi^2_p \;+\; \frac{1}{2(2\pi)^3}(|p|^2 \;+\; m^2)\phi_p^2\Big)
[/tex]

In quantum theory, the system is described by a wave functional [itex]\Psi(t,\phi)[/itex], which satisfies the Schrödinger's equation

[tex]
i\partial_t\Psi(t,\phi) \;=\; \int d^3p\;\Big(-\frac{(2\pi)^3}{2}\frac{\delta^2}{\delta\phi_p^2} \;+\; \frac{1}{2(\2pi)^3}(|p|^2 \;+\; m^2)\phi_p^2\Big)\Psi(t,\phi).
[/tex]

This is just an infinite dimensional harmonic oscillator, analogous, for example, to a Schrödinger's equation

[tex]
i\partial_t\Psi(t,x_1,x_2,x_3) \;=\; \sum_{k=1}^3 \Big(-\frac{1}{2}\partial_k^2 \;+\; a_k x_k^2\Big)\Psi(t,x_1,x_2,x_3).
[/tex]

If one tries the separation attempt

[tex]
\Psi(\phi) = \prod_{p\in\mathbb{R}^3} \Psi_p(\phi_p)
[/tex]

one sees that this solves the energy eigenvalue problem, if all components satisfy the one dimensional Schrödinger's equation for harmonic oscillator. So the energy eigenstates are characterized by mapping [itex]n:\mathbb{R}^3\to\mathbb{N}[/itex], [itex]p\mapsto n_p[/itex], and the solutions are something like

[tex]
\Psi_n(\phi) \;\propto\; \exp\Big(\int d^3p\; \frac{1}{2}\sqrt{|p|^2 + m^2}\phi_p^2\Big) \prod_{p\in\mathbb{R}^3} H_{n_p}(\sqrt{|p|^2 + m^2}\phi_p)
[/tex]

Then suppose you have some classical field [itex]\Delta\phi:\mathbb{R}^3\to\mathbb{R}[/itex]. It should be possible to construct a functional wave packet that is localized around this value. Basically you do the Gaussian wave packet for each component separately, so that the peak is at desired value, and then multiply them to form an infinite dimensional wave packet. If, for each [itex]p[/itex],

[tex]
\Phi_p:\mathbb{R}\to\mathbb{C},\quad \phi_p\mapsto\Phi_p(\phi_p)
[/tex]

is peaked around some number [itex]\Delta\phi_p[/itex], then

[tex]
\Phi:\mathbb{R}^{\mathbb{R}^3}\to\mathbb{C},\quad \Phi(\phi)=\prod_{p\in\mathbb{R}^3} \Phi_p(\phi_p)
[/tex]

should be peaked around the function [itex]\Delta\phi:\mathbb{R}^3\to\mathbb{R}[/itex], [itex]p\mapsto\Delta\phi_p[/itex].

Or at least this is how I've understood this :biggrin: All comments are welcome. I haven't been studying this from any reliable sources. More like half studying, half rediscovery. I think books usually prefer doing all this using highly abstract operators only, but this should be equivalent. Since the forum is full of physicists, conceptual mistakes in this post, if there are such, probably get corrected soon :wink:
 
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  • #21
padremo said:
This Richard Feynman lecture (In New Zealand, 1978) courtesy of the Vega Science Trust brilliantly explains the basics of QED, the relation between light and matter, and gives great insights into how light appears to behave to us.
(There's 3 lectures, each lasting 1 and a half hours but they're all well worth watching).

http://www.vega.org.uk/video/subseries/8

I've watched roughly 3 of the 4 lectures and find them very insightful. However, I think I'm missing some of the more fundamental topics he explained and have questions about several things. I think the main difficulty I'm having is with the concept of amplitudes.

What are the amplitudes? Is the amplitude a probability? Are they supposed to be vectors or something like that? I'm confused on why the arrows are spinning wrt to time? Is this the frequency of the light or how fast it takes the light to get from the emitter to the photomultiplier. I think the amplitudes spin over sometime interval as the light moves from the emitter to the photomultiplier, and that the angles of the amplitudes cancel out if they aren't the angles of the least time (which he showed with the graph of time below the graph of the 2 reflective surfaces) , which corresponds to the least distance for the light to travel. I think this has to do with the wavelength of the light, but am still unsure how this works. I understand that the probability is the square of the amplitude, but I am confused on what the amplitude really is. I think it has to do with something about how much light hits the photomultiplier or the odds that an event will occur, like a single photon hitting a photomultiplier, but then what would the probability your are calculating from the amplitude be (the circle he draws around the two amplitudes)? He explains the amplitudes in a probability way when he is showing how to add and multiply them (1/9 * 1/25 = 1/225), but talks about them differently in other parts of his lecture (time it takes light to move and its angles). Is he using different definitions of amplitude? He also said that the amplitude is shrinking over time and I am confused as to why this is happening also.

Is the interference pattern of the light the graph he drew with reflective index against thickness (looked like sine wave)? I am confused on why the reflective index increases and decreases wrt the thickness (why the wave pattern continues). My intuition would tell me that as thickness increases the reflective index would decrease and not keep increasing in that pattern. Then he shows that the interference pattern of blue light would have move cycles than red light wrt the thickness. Is he talking about the frequency of the light or the interference pattern? I understand that light travels slower in a medium, but would the frequency of the light affect how fast the light moves and how fast the amplitudes spin? Why do electrons have a faster spinning amplitude? Do electrons have higher energy/frequency than light? Can someone explain what he is doing to the reflectivity when he is cutting out pieces of the mirror to make it reflect better, how does this work/ why? How does the angle at which light traveling from one medium to another correspond to the angle of the amplitudes? I think this has something to do with the phase velocities, but I'm not sure how the amplitudes are describing this. Are the diagrams he uses called Feynman diagrams (the ones with space as x and time as y)?

Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thank you.
 
  • #22
Hi,
Just found this forum topic and thought I might contribute some answers since it is up my alley. Sorry if some of my answers overlap with others, although I'll try to avoid repeating too much.

GRB 080319B said:
I have plethora of questions about light:

1.) I understand that light is created when the electrons in an atom jump to a higher level and fall back down to their ground state. When light is emitted, is it emitted orthogonal to the electron or at the angle of absorption? How is light emitted orthogonal to the nucleus when the electron jumps and falls back orthogonal to the nucleus? Isn't light emitted perpendicular to the direction that the electron jumps? Or are the electrons not orbiting parallel to the nucleus? Do photons/light waves propagate outward in all directions, e.g. a ripple in a pond, or unidirectionally?

In quantum optics, there are basically two kinds of photon emission from an atom: stimulated emission and spontaneous emission. Stimulated emission means the photon is emitted due to the presence of a second nearby photon. In essence, the second photon encourages the new photon to be emitted. For this case, the new photon will occupy the same "mode" as the first photon, or in other words it will travel in the same direction with the same polarization, same phase, etc. This is how lasers work. A photon comes by, stimulates another photon to be emitted with the same properties. The two photons can then stimulate more photons and so on. If you have enough excited atoms this becomes a run-away process until eventually there is an equilibrium between losses in the system and new photons being created into this system via stimulated emission.

The second method for an atom to emit light is spontaneous emission. Like with radioactive decay, there is a lifetime associated with an excited atom. During this lifetime, there is a chance that the atom will return to an un-excited state and emit a photon in the process. Because this process is random and not prompted by other photons, there is no preference for the "mode" of the photon. There is equal probability over all directions that the photon will be detected. In the classical picture, this is most like the spherical wave emanating from the atom.

Oh, and to say the electron is orbiting the nucleus isn't very accurate when talking in the quantum sense. We usually say the electron has a wavefunction which describes the (spatial) probability distribution for measuring the electron at that location. The weird quantum thing is that the electron is simultaneously in all locations where the wavefunction is non-zero although an actual measurement might show it as being at a particular point. It would be as if an entire ocean wave would instantly disappear as soon as it made a buoy move up-and-down (i.e. it was measured).


GRB 080319B said:
2.) Is light from a reflective surface like a mirror really absorbed and re-emitted or is it just reflected? Is any energy lost in the process of re-emitting light, i.e. is some of the energy of the absorbed photon turned into heat, or is it a complete conversion? Is their any way to modulate the amount/wavelength of photons re-emitted? Do ionized atoms emit different wavelengths than their electrically neutral counterparts would? Does light in the form of photons/waves lose energy as it propagates through space and if so how?

There are several questions here that I will try and address. To start, there are two aspects of light interaction with matter. The first (discussed in the answer above) is absorption/emission. The second is what we call the "index of refraction" for a material. If you want, you could say the absorption/emission affects the strength of the light while the index of refraction affects the phase. Reflection and index of refraction fall into this second category where only the phase of the light is affected. From a classical picture, the electric field (which is part of a light wave) causes electrons in the material to oscillate. These oscillating electrons create new light waves. The atoms in the material however have their own natural resonance frequency they want to oscillate at. If the incident light is not exatly at this resonance frequency, then the new light will have a different phase than the old light. In this classical picture, you add the electric fields up to get the net light wave, and because of this phase difference you get effects such as slowed down propagation or even reflection. Most of this can be translated into an equivalent semi-classical or even quantum description, but I have never gained much additional insight from doing so.

As for light changing frequency, it can happen, but you have to work at it. For instance, there is a thing called a Doppler shift. Imagine shining a lser pointer at a mirror that is flying away from you. The light coming back will actually be slightly redder in color (lower frequency) than the light coming out of the pointer. This is called the Doppler effect, and has been exploted for neat science tricks. In fact, it makes up the bulk of laser cooling (my specialty) which can take a room temperature gas and cool it to within a milli-Kelvin above absolute zero within a fraction of a second! Additional tricks can then get you colder, and eventually into Bose-Einstein condensation which you may have heard about.

As for ionized atoms, I am not an expert, but I don't think things change much. The color (frequency) of light depends only on atomic transitions, which I believe stay the same with ionization.

Lastly, I am not sure how to answer the losing energy question. What I will say is that as you move away from the atom there are more places you can detect the photon, and so the probability of detecting the photon at anyone location decreases. For the stimulated emission description I mentioned above, this is not necessarily true since the photon is emitted in a specific direction, but for the spontaneous emission which has uniform emission with direction it is. To see why, just think of a sphere surrounding the atom. The surface area of the sphere goes as the radius^2. The probability must always be 100% that it can be measured, and so for an equivalent size detector, the probability a photon is detected will fall as 1/radius^2. You can see this just by consideration of the fractional size of your detector with respect to the size of the sphere.


GRB 080319B said:
3.) Light is described as being an electromagnetic wave, with electric and magnetic components. I understand these components come from electrons having magnetic and electric properties. How exactly do the magnetic and electric properties of electrons merge to form electromagnetic waves? Is the electric component caused by the electrons falling from higher energy levels? How is the magnetic component created? How does an electromagnetic wave contain both a magnetic and electric component within one wave? How do current, magnetic and electric fields affect light or produce it, and conversely, how does light affect said fields and current?

I think others have explained this well enough. Classically, light can be thought of as a self-perpetuating electro-magnetic field. The time changing electric field produces a time-varying magnetic field which produces a time-varying electric field, and so on.


GRB 080319B said:
4.) I am familiar with seeing light shown like this: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/a1/Light-wave.svg"
Is there any way to visualize light in 3D instead of 2D cross sections? Is light a standing wave and does it contain a definite beginning and end point on the wave (does it have a definite length, not wavelength)?
How does light get polarized in the first place, and into circular and elliptical angles? Does the amplitude and intensity of light correspond to the amplitude of the individual photon/wave or is it a property of the sum of the photons/waves of the light?

Technically it is impossible to have infinite extent, although we often approximate things that way. But to answer your question, I'd say that the length of a photon is given by the region where its wavefunction is significant. You can figure out what "significant" means to you.

Polarization is interesting, and has been hit upon already in these messages, but let me add my two cents. In quantum optics, polarization is related to angular momentum. Light has angular momentum, electrons can also have angular momentum depending on the state it is in, and even the nucleus of an atom has angular momentum. Conservation of angular momentum means that when an electron changes from the excited state to ground state, its angular momentum can change, but only if the light carries away that extra angular momentum. Polarization is a characterization of the spin-angular momentum of light, and thus depending on the spin-angular momenta of the two electronic states, you can get different polarizations of light.

For the Hydrogen atom which has only one proton and one electron, the system is simple and the angular momenta of the electronic states can be derived from first principles. Not only that, but by using the rules for quantized angular momenta one can calculate the exact probability that an electron in a particular excited state will decay to a particular ground state and not some other ground state. When I say "some other ground state" or "particular excited state" here, I am referring to the fact that quantum mechanics only allow for specific values of angular momentum (it is quantized), but that the mere presence of the angular momentum means that each energy level can actually have multiple (but finite) degeneracies. To be more concrete, an atom in the ground energy level could be "spin up" (one state) or "spin down" (another state) as an example. Thus in this example there are two possible ground states, each with their own spin-angular momentum.

Anyhow, the short answer to all this is that the polarization for a given photon depends on the change in spin-angular momentum between the two states the electron hops between when the photon is emitted. For simple Hydrogen-like materials the probability for a particular level change can be calculated, but otherwise you are essentially left with random luck. The net polarization for a light beam is a combination of the polarizations for the individual photons.


GRB 080319B said:
5.) I've also seen light shown as loops of electric lines of force: http://www.colorado.edu/physics/PhysicsInitiative/Physics2000.03.99/microwaves/images/fig10.jpg"
I am confused as to how the loop correalates to a wave and why it is expanding. Is the wave increasing in size and if so how?

I have to admit I am not familiar with this particular way of thinking.



GRB 080319B said:
I am struggling to visualize how all these processes are occurring to create light and would appreciate any help. Thank you.

Hopefully some of the above answers help. Although the details are complex, I would try to summarize the generation of light as a consequence of needing conservation of energy and conservation of angular momentum. Quantum mechanics says there are a finite number of energy states an electron can be in. Switching between these states requires a change in energy and angular momentum of the electron, which is balanced by an equal but opposite change which we call a photon. As others have pointed out, a good lesson in quantum mechanics (or at least another thread in these forums) would probably help explain some of the weird effects such as why electrons have a discrete (finite) set of energy levels.
 
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  • #23
I have some questions on light and magnetism in addition to those I posted earlier about the Feynman lectures:

Light:
Are electron orbitals visibly changed when the light interacts with them (the orbital rippling and changing), or is there just an instantaneous transition to a higher orbital? This question is purely a desire for a visual understanding of what is going on at that level.

This http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/mod3.html#c1" shows light being transformed into molecular motion, among other things for different wavelengths. Has the light been re-emitted, and if not , what happened to the light in this circumstance? Does the re-emition of light cause the movement of the atoms? Is heat just molecular motion or is it infrared light? What is the difference between the effects of microwave and infrared light on molecules/ is molecular vibration more intense than molecular rotation (generates more heat)? Why does exposure to visible light cause heating? Do all wavelenghs cause heating? Is light ever absorbed and not reemitted (turned completely into mechanical motion)?

What level (according to the site: torsion,vibration,electrons) do radio waves act on? Do they act only on large metallic objects (antennas)? What do radio waves do at the atomic level?

Magnetism:
Is the current in permanent magnets the result of electrons orbiting the magnets atoms? Do electrons have to be in specific orbitals to create magnetism? Can the magnetism created by an electron's spin be understood through special relativity (lorentz contraction)? Do the electrons orbit around in the same way a current flows around in a solenoid? I have a feeling the answers to the previous questions are no bc they are dealing with quantum and not classical phenomenon.

Does the magnetic field around current flowing through a straight wire have a north/south pole? If so, how, and does it depend on the direction of the current wrt another wire? Is the direction of the current in a wire the only thing that determines the magnetic pole? Do the north/south poles only arise from the sum of individual magnetic fields (like in a solenoid)? Will a compass needle point toward a wire with a current flowing through it, if so, does the alignment of the needle depend on the direction of current? Is the current in the wire inducing a current in the needle/ why does the needle change directions?

When a magnetic field is shown on paper, do the x's and dots in circles represent the field lines themselves coming into/ out of the paper or the poles of the magnet? Why, or perhaps how, is the magnetic field represented as x's and dots if it is curving around the magnet? How does this visualizing system work?

How does magnetic induction work? Can be induction be understood by special relativity, as is the magnetic attraction between two wires w/ current in same direction?

Why do charged particles spiral around specific field lines instead of falling into the magnet? Can charged particles cross field lines or are they stuck on one line? Are there specific field lines corresponding to the energies of charged particles (like energy states for electrons)? Do the field lines exist at discrete levels?

Why is the force on the charged particle always perpendicular to its velocity and why does that force act that way (why does the magnet push the particle away when it approaches and doesn't act like the mutual attraction between the two wires)? Does the polarity of the charged particle affect how it interacts with the magnetic field?

How do charged particles stay in the radiation belts if the field lines terminate at the poles? Do they all end up as auroras? Do they jump back down to the bottom or go through the Earth somehow? Do the radiation belts themselves serve any beneficial purpose to the Earth? Can they be used as an energy source or for scientific experimentation?

Is the current of the Earth's outer core that generates the magnetic field moving around like current in a solenoid? Is the current circling west to east?


I apologize for asking redundant questions that would be covered in physics textbooks or classes. Unfortunately, I am unable to utilize those resources at this time. Thank you for your patience and help.
 
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  • #24
Gravitysmith said:
What I will say is that as you move away from the atom there are more places you can detect the photon, and so the probability of detecting the photon at anyone location decreases.

Thanks for your detailed replies. ALso do you know this?
Can a single photon spread out spherically, so that any telescope on a large spherical surface area has a chance of detecting it? Or are photons confined to a more limited wave packet?
 
  • #25
I'm going to try to create another thread for the magnetism questions since they aren't part of the topic of this thread.
 
  • #26
GRB 080319B said:
I'm going to try to create another thread for the magnetism questions since they aren't part of the topic of this thread.

Did you make a new thread? Where is it?
 
  • #27
wawenspop said:
Did you make a new thread? Where is it?

"www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=253035"[/URL]
 
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  • #28
Gravitysmith said:
Like with radioactive decay, there is a lifetime associated with an excited atom. During this lifetime, there is a chance that the atom will return to an un-excited state and emit a photon in the process. Because this process is random and not prompted by other photons, there is no preference for the "mode" of the photon.


Does it means that my wall in my bedroom emits light and\or any object. at what rate does photons are emitted. I'm a bit lost also when a photon is emitted (I haven't found the answer) is it "viewable" from anywhere or the photon is only emited at a partcular angle ? or even a cone of visibility...
 
  • #29
Thank you for your replies. I have a few more questions:

In the QED lectures, Feynman describes refraction with an analogy to a lifeguard. The lifeguard takes the path of least time to save someone by traveling a greater distance on land, where he is faster, and less distance in the water, where he is slower. He calculates that a certain distance should be traveled on land before traveling in the water to minimize the elapsed time. I'm confused on the way light on the other hand intuitively knows the shortest path, unlike Feynman's lifeguard who calculated the shortest distance. I assume its impossible that the light itself is performing these calculations. Is the medium itself steering the light into the shortest path, and is this why the light is curved when it crosses media?

Is Feynman talking about angular frequency when he makes the little circles to represent the amplitudes and the angled arrows in the diagrams about probabilty?

Does abosorption of light of any wavelength cause heating of the material encountered? What is thermal radiation? Does it have a specific wavelength? Why do blackbodies get brighter as well as blushift with increasing temperature?

Are any colors purely combinations of other colors or can all colors be attributed to single wavelengths of light? Is there a reason most metals have a grey color? Is the metal color a single or a combintation of wavelengths?

When a material is heated and its atoms are vibrating and knocking into each other, is the momentum imparted by collisions between atoms transferred in the form of a thermal photon or purely the repulsive electric forces of the electrons themselves? In other words, does the conduction of heat in a material at an atomic scale propagate like sound waves (atoms colliding and electrons repelling) or as em radiation (atoms absorbing and reemitting thermal radiation)?

Do electric power lines emit em waves because of their AC current? What is the frequency of such waves, and do they interact/interfere with radio/electrical equipment?

I also found a interesting article on grbs: http://www.physorg.com/news140268133.html"

Thank you very much for your help.
 
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  • #30
suomi said:
Does it means that my wall in my bedroom emits light and\or any object. at what rate does photons are emitted. I'm a bit lost also when a photon is emitted (I haven't found the answer) is it "viewable" from anywhere or the photon is only emited at a partcular angle ? or even a cone of visibility...

Yes, your wall and every object emits light (photons). Most objects are more or less in thermal equilibrium, so what is emitted here is absorbed elsewhere nearby (approximately). In a normal situation, the photon can be emitted in any direction. Obviously when you have a flashlight, laser, or other light source, you will usually see that the light is sent out in a particular direction. But this is not necessarily typical.
 
  • #31
Padremo, since you posted the feynman lectures, could you help me with my questions about them and/or the other topics as well? Any help will be appreciated. Thank you.
 
  • #32
GRB 080319B -- Once again, let me suggest that to answer your questions, and for you to understand the answers is an exercise of three years of study -- two if you are really quick. That is to say, you will need to understand and master most of Jackson's E&M text, and then master a basic course in QM, and then master an introductory course in quantum electrodynamics. Look at it as: the answers to your questions will take several hundred pages of text. For the level of specificity you request, there are not any short cuts. That's life in the physics world. (If you don't understand thermal radiation, then you are in trouble, and thus you need a course or book on the physical phenomena that lead to quantum theory -- often advertised a a beginning course in atomic physics -- like Planck and Einstein and Bohr. If you do not have a good grasp of the basic atomic physics involved, you will never understand light.

Good luck,.
Reilly Atkinson
 
  • #33
reilly said:
GRB 080319B -- Once again, let me suggest that to answer your questions, and for you to understand the answers is an exercise of three years of study -- two if you are really quick. That is to say, you will need to understand and master most of Jackson's E&M text, and then master a basic course in QM, and then master an introductory course in quantum electrodynamics. Look at it as: the answers to your questions will take several hundred pages of text. For the level of specificity you request, there are not any short cuts. That's life in the physics world. (If you don't understand thermal radiation, then you are in trouble, and thus you need a course or book on the physical phenomena that lead to quantum theory -- often advertised a a beginning course in atomic physics -- like Planck and Einstein and Bohr. If you do not have a good grasp of the basic atomic physics involved, you will never understand light.

Good luck,.
Reilly Atkinson

Thank you very much for your advice reilly. I am going to study this topic in-depth and refrain from posting questions whose answers I wouldn't understand without a substantive foundation. I apologize for not listening to your help the first time. I will leave this thread open for anyone else to post their questions.

Thank you all for your help.
 

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