What is matter?

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From the point of view of quantum physics... Could physicists agree what matter is?

We see it, we describe it yet it resists intuitive understanding.

Is matter really just energy and measurement, decoherence, splitting, whatever process that brings out single outcomes aka "matter"?
 
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Demiurge said:
From the point of view of quantum physics... Could physicists agree what matter is?
"Matter" is a word. Physics is not done in words. It's done in math. So what the word "matter" means depends on what thing in the math you use that word to refer to.
 
I think we've explored this before in another thread.

I offered the rough-n-ready description that - with a few notable exceptions* - matter encompasses the gamut of fermionic particles - the particles that obey the Pauli Exclusion Principle, and as a result "takes up room", in the way that, say, light does not. (You can fill a box with electrons until it's full, but you cannot "fill up" the same box with light.)

* Helium-3 is one of those notable exceptions that is matter, yet apparently does not seem to obey PEP.

That may not suit everyone, but I think it's a pretty good starting point.
 
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Demiurge said:
Is matter really just energy

Whatever "matter" means, for sure energy is a property of matter, not matter itself.
 
Undergraduate answer to an undergraduate question: matter is anything that has inertial mass, i.e.,
anything that resists acceleration: ##m = F/a##.
If you push it and it pushes back, it's matter.
 
I would have said: matter is simply condensed energy.

You might run into minor problems with this defintion because of energy-mass equivalence (most of an atom's mass comes from the binding energy of its constituents, after all). But the adjective 'condensed' captures quite well that it's something that now exists in reality, something you can somehow touch, and something that stays there without just disappearing again.
 
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DaveC426913 said:
Helium-3 is one of those notable exceptions that is matter, yet apparently does not seem to obey PEP.
He-3 does "take up room"; the fact that it is superfluid at low enough temperatures does not prevent it from occupying volume. "Superfluid" is not the same thing as "acts like light". (And note that He-3 is actually a fermion, not a boson, so "superfluid" is not even the same thing as "boson", although they are not unrelated. He-4 is the bosonic He isotope, and it becomes superfluid at a temperature about three orders of magnitude higher than He-3. But He-4 also occupies volume even when it is a superfluid.)
 
PeterDonis said:
He-3 does "take up room"; the fact that it is superfluid at low enough temperatures does not prevent it from occupying volume. "Superfluid" is not the same thing as "acts like light". (And note that He-3 is actually a fermion, not a boson, so "superfluid" is not even the same thing as "boson", although they are not unrelated. He-4 is the bosonic He isotope, and it becomes superfluid at a temperature about three orders of magnitude higher than He-3. But He-4 also occupies volume even when it is a superfluid.)
Right. That's why I originally proposed it in the older thread before being corrected.

Still, is it safe to say that - with some exceptions, anything fermionic can be described as matter because of its predilection for taking up room?
 
PhyEnthusiast said:
I would have said: matter is simply condensed energy.

You might run into minor problems with this defintion because of energy-mass equivalence (most of an atom's mass comes from the binding energy of its constituents, after all). But the adjective 'condensed' captures quite well that it's something that now exists in reality, something you can somehow touch, and something that stays there without just disappearing again.
Mass and energy are properties of matter (and of antimatter). Matter also has charge, spin and other properties, like colour charge etc.
 
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weirdoguy said:
Whatever "matter" means, for sure energy is a property of matter, not matter itself.

PeroK said:
Mass and energy are properties of matter (and of antimatter). Matter also has charge, spin and other properties, like colour charge etc.

Before a measurement though, what is energy a property of?
 
  • #11
weirdoguy said:
for sure energy is a property of matter

Or the fields in general.
 
  • #12
Electromagnetic radiation is energy. And is not a property of matter. Whatever matter is, calling energy a property of matter might be too narrow of an angle.
 
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  • #13
Demiurge said:
Electromagnetic radiation is energy

No! It's not energy. Energy is a PROPERTY of EM radiation. One of many. Energy is property of things, not thing itself. @PhyEnthusiast it's for you also.
 
  • #14
weirdoguy said:
No! It's not energy. Energy is a PROPERTY of EM radiation. One of many. Energy is property of things, not thing itself. @PhyEnthusiast it's for you also.


Yes, I know this classical perspective. I think everyone agrees with it.

If someone were to ask what is more fundamental, things would be less ideal as quantum physics doesn't list matter as one of its preconceived notions.
 
  • #15
Demiurge said:
Yes, I know this classical perspective.

It's not classical. It's the only perspective in physics, both in quantum and classical.

Demiurge said:
If someone were to ask what is more fundamental, things would be less ideal as quantum physics doesn't list matter as one of its preconceived notions.

I don't know what you mean, but it's not physics, it's philosophy at best.
 
  • #16
Demiurge said:
Electromagnetic radiation is energy. And is not a property of matter. Whatever matter is, calling energy a property of matter might be too narrow of an angle.
Colour is a property of paint. But colour is a property of other things as well.

Energy is not exclusively a property of matter. It can be a property of other things as well. E.g It might also be a property of the vacuum (dark energy).

In any case, the main point is that matter is not "condensed energy".
 
  • #17
weirdoguy said:
It's not classical. It's the only perspective in physics, both in quantum and classical.



I don't know what you mean, but it's not physics, it's philosophy at best.

Kind of. It is interpretation of physics.
 
  • #18
Demiurge said:
It is interpretation of physics.

This subforum is about QM interpretations, and it does not mean what you think it means. Philosophy is in general forbidden topic here on PF.
 
  • #19
weirdoguy said:
This subforum is about QM interpretations, and it does not mean what you think it means. Philosophy is in general forbidden topic here on PF.


You were replying to this, which concerns interpretative issues of quantum physics:

Is matter really just energy and measurement, decoherence, splitting, whatever process that brings out single outcomes aka "matter"?
 

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