Wave Length of Photon: How Many Wavelengths Does It Contain?

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SUMMARY

The discussion centers on the composition of photons as electromagnetic (EM) wave packets and the number of wavelengths they contain. It is established that a photon can be described by its energy spread, E ± δE, which directly influences the length of the wave packet. A photon with a sharply defined energy has a long wave packet, while one with a broader energy spread has a shorter packet. The number of oscillations in the packet is determined by the ratio E/δE, indicating that the composition of photons varies based on their energy characteristics.

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ValenceE
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Bob_for_short said:
The photon frequency is the wave frequency, no problem with it. A single photon is a sufficiently long wave packet (of thousands or dozens thousands of vibrations in it)...


Hello all,

The above quote is the first part of a reponse to a 2005 OP's question about frequency of a photon, and one of the few hints to an answer to one of my own enquiries about the wavelength of a photon...

I understand that EM waves come in a vast number of frequencies, however I was wondering about the discreteness of the photon as an EM wave packet and namely the number of wavelengths it contains.

Are all photons alike in their composition, do they all have the same amount of wavelengths or is this dependent on some QM property ? if different, what determines the compositions of different wave packets ?


regards,

VE
 
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VE, Unfortunately Bob_for_short had it wrong.

Classically an electromagnetic wave comes in the form of a wave packet with a spread of frequencies ω ± δω. The frequency spread and the length of the packet are inversely related. One with a sharply defined frequency will have a very long wave packet, and one with a larger spread in frequency will have a short packet. Roughly the number of oscillations in the packet is given by the ratio ω/δω.

For a photon there is no difference. A photon will have some spread in energy, E ± δE. A photon with a sharply defined energy will have a long wave packet and one with a larger spread in energy will have a short one. Roughly the number of oscillations in the packet is given by E/δE.

Whether a classical description or a quantum description of the wave is appropriate depends only on the amplitude. Otherwise they are similar. The question you ask, "how many wavelengths does a photon contain" does not have a unique answer, because the answer depends on the energy spread.
 

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