Virtual Photons over Large Distances

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the nature of virtual photons and their role in transmitting electromagnetic forces over large distances. Participants explore the implications of the uncertainty principle, the interpretation of virtual particles in quantum field theory, and the relationship between virtual and real particles in experimental contexts.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants propose that virtual photons exist within the framework of the uncertainty principle, allowing for their role in electromagnetic interactions.
  • Others argue that virtual particles should not be taken literally, as they appear in perturbation expansions and can take on energies not constrained by relativistic relations, being "off the mass-shell."
  • A participant challenges the belief in quarks as real entities, suggesting they are always virtual due to their unobservability as free particles.
  • Another participant emphasizes the experimental perspective, asserting that virtual particles can be detected indirectly through high-energy experiments, such as those at the LHC, where virtual b quarks contribute to observable phenomena.
  • Some participants express the view that all particles are slightly off-shell and that the concept of free particles is a mathematical abstraction rather than a reflection of physical reality.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express multiple competing views regarding the reality and interpretation of virtual particles, with no consensus reached on their nature or implications in physical theory.

Contextual Notes

Limitations include the dependence on interpretations of quantum field theory, the ambiguity surrounding the definitions of virtual and real particles, and the unresolved nature of the relationship between theoretical constructs and experimental observations.

Vorde
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It's my understanding that virtual photons are 'allowed' because their existence does not violate the uncertainty principle (the form using ΔE and ΔT). If this is the case though, how is the electromagnetic force transmitted over large distances?
 
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I think one should not take the virtual particles too literally. Terms that look like intermediate particles (propagators) show up in the perturbation expansion of the interaction between two interacting external particles. However, their energies are allowed to take any value, not just those allowed by the relativistic energy/momentum relation. They are said to be "off the mass-shell".
The perturbation expansion calls for us to integrate over all possible paths these intermediate or virtual particles can take - even paths of infinite range.
 
I take it then that you do not believe in the existence of quarks, which are always virtual.
 
Bill_K: Good point.

I try to keep myself from thinking about of what "really" exists. This allows me to sleep fairly well.
 
You can scatter off virtual b quarks in a proton during high energy physics experiments (like at the LHC) which can produce b jets, which leave a unique signature in your detector. So, from an experimentalist point of view, virtual particles are real. Plus, any "real" particle is always slightly off shell anyway, so they are in essence virtual as well. But this is just slightly off topic...
 
cbetanco said:
You can scatter off virtual b quarks in a proton during high energy physics experiments (like at the LHC) which can produce b jets, which leave a unique signature in your detector. So, from an experimentalist point of view, virtual particles are real. Plus, any "real" particle is always slightly off shell anyway, so they are in essence virtual as well. But this is just slightly off topic...

Thanks for making that so perfectly clear. Here on PF questions about virtual particles seem to come up quite often, which then are often addressed by some 'experts' as mere fictious calculation tools with no physical meaning whatsoever. Of course, notwithstanding that every particle physics or qft book and every working particle physicist would deny that, or disregarding the fact that momentum transfer of repelling charges or attraction of two charges can't simply not explained without the help of virtual processes.
 
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Bill_K said:
... quarks, which are always virtual.

I assume you say this because free quarks are not observed, correct?
 
Yes, and I would further argue that the same thing can be said not just about quarks, but everything. Sometimes I see the statement made that virtual particles are somehow not real. On the contrary, virtual particles are the only ones that are real. It is the concept of a free particle that is a mathematical fiction!

Every particle in the world is ever so slightly off the mass shell, because it is en route from one interaction to another. This remains true even if those interactions happen to be millions of years apart. A free particle is a solution to the free wave equation. It's convenient to use the idealized concept of free particles when we talk about scattering problems, but they don't really exist. No free particle has ever been observed. By definition!
 

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