From Bob S
The Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle permits fluctuations in the instantaneous energy and time duration of a vacuum fluctuation, as long as delta E delta t <= h-bar. For a delta E > 1.02 MeV, a virtual electron positron pair can be created. Virtual pair production is the lowest order correction to a photon or Coulomb field.
sanjibghosh said:
where this energy comes from? the virtual particles could be electron-positron or any thing else, why is it electron-positron pair?
The energy fluctuation
delta-E is the minimum uncertainty (Heisenberg Unvertainty principal) in determining the energy within a time interval
delta-t. This is a quantum-mechanical version of the electrical engineer's
delta-w and
delta-t in the Fourier transform from time to frequency domain. If we write the uncertaity principal for a photon of energy
E = h v = h-bar w we get
delta E delta t = h-bar delta w delta-t = h-bar (physics version)
or dividing by h-bar we get
delta-w delta t = 1 (engineer's version)
Electron-positron virtual particle pairs are the most dominant of the possible virtual pairs, because the electron and positron are the lightest charged particles, with a threshold of 1.02 MeV. Next in line are muon-anti-muon pairs, with a threshold of about 210 MeV.
There are two very precise fundamental physics measurements, "g-2" of electrons, and "g-2" of muons (g = gyromagnetic ratio) that have virtual particle pairs as the lowest order correction to QED. Electron pairs for the electron g-2, and muon pairs for the muon g-2. are identical corrections to the respective g-2 measurements. But a big change for the muon g-2 is that there is another much larger correction to the muon measurement; virtual electron pairs in the muon g-2.