Where do photons originate in a vacuum filament?

  • Context: Graduate 
  • Thread starter Thread starter Byron Forbes
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Photons
Click For Summary

Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the origins of photons emitted from a filament in a vacuum, exploring whether these emissions can be attributed solely to the filament itself or if other factors contribute to the observed glow. The conversation touches on concepts of vacuum conditions, evaporation of materials, and potential alternative theories regarding photon generation.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Debate/contested
  • Technical explanation

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants propose that the glow may not originate directly from the filament, suggesting alternative sources for the emitted photons.
  • Others argue that the glow could be due to evaporating tungsten, which is a common phenomenon in vacuum bulbs, and that the presence of inert gas can reduce this effect.
  • A later reply questions the vacuum integrity, asserting that the bulb is not a true vacuum and that the glow is likely due to scattering from vaporized materials.
  • Some participants express skepticism about whether the glow can be fully explained by evaporation or reflections, suggesting the possibility of other mechanisms at play.
  • One participant introduces the idea that photons might be created outside the filament due to magnetic field interactions, proposing a connection to a hypothetical luminiferous aether.
  • Concerns are raised about the need for extraordinary evidence to support claims that contradict established theories like relativity.
  • Another participant mentions that the filament's environment significantly influences the light emission, indicating that various factors could contribute to the observed phenomena.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express a range of views, with no clear consensus on the origins of the photons. Some agree on the role of evaporation, while others challenge this explanation and propose alternative theories. The discussion remains unresolved with competing perspectives on the mechanisms involved.

Contextual Notes

Limitations include the potential for misinterpretation of visual data from the video, the influence of environmental factors on light emission, and the complexity of establishing definitive claims without controlled experimental evidence.

Byron Forbes
Messages
47
Reaction score
17
Filament in a vacuum

Take a quick look at this!

Now, can the glow be explained in any other way than concluding that photons are being emitted from somewhere other than directly from the filament? i.e. is it not obvious that photons are being emitted from points of origin other than the filament itself (from off to the side?).

Is it an imperfect vacuum and thus there is some reflection from low density air? Is that really possible? I think not.

Something to do with the glass bowl? Again, I think not.
 
Science news on Phys.org
Looks cool. The glow is coming from evaporating tungsten, would be my guess. I gather that's one reason why they usually fill bulbs with inert gas, because it retards evaporation compared to vacuum operation. Whatever it is, you can see it being blown around in the slow-mo when he let's air back in.

Don't know why this is in Relativity. You're more likely to get authoritative answers in one of the engineering forums. I'll suggest it be moved.
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Likes   Reactions: FactChecker
Byron Forbes said:
Summary:: Photons from a filament?

Filament in a vacuum

Take a quick look at this!

Now, can the glow be explained in any other way than concluding that photons are being emitted from somewhere other than directly from the filament? i.e. is it not obvious that photons are being emitted from points of origin other than the filament itself (from off to the side?).

Is it an imperfect vacuum and thus there is some reflection from low density air? Is that really possible? I think not.

Something to do with the glass bowl? Again, I think not.
It is very clearly not a vacuum. When the broken bulb is turned on you can immediately see a vapor of material fill the bowl. I presume that the material is mostly ablated tungsten, but it could be some powder or coating from the inside of the original bulb that got on the filament. In any case, it is clearly no longer vacuum so I suspect most of the light is scattering and some incandescent vapor particles. Plus there is likely some glare on the lens and in the camera.
 
  • Like
Likes   Reactions: FactChecker
Ibix said:
Don't know why this is in Relativity. You're more likely to get authoritative answers in one of the engineering forums. I'll suggest it be moved.

It is in this section because if photons are emitted from anywhere other than the filament then contemporary science cannot explain it. It would be the end of Relativity and evidence that the photons are longitudinal pulses, the product of the magnetic field pulses around the filament rather than emissions from electrons within the filament.

And are you suggesting you haven't seen this in other bulbs? Can all this "glow" really be explained by evaporation or reflections? I put a huge ? over that!
 
  • Skeptical
  • Wow
Likes   Reactions: davenn, Dale, weirdoguy and 3 others
Byron Forbes said:
contemporary science cannot explain it.
Hot gas is a well known source of light.
 
  • Like
Likes   Reactions: russ_watters and Dale
Dale said:
It is very clearly not a vacuum. When the broken bulb is turned on you can immediately see a vapor of material fill the bowl. I presume that the material is mostly ablated tungsten, but it could be some powder or coating from the inside of the original bulb that got on the filament. In any case, it is clearly no longer vacuum so I suspect most of the light is scattering and some incandescent vapor particles. Plus there is likely some glare on the lens and in the camera.

If you look at the video from 47-57 sec, it is a very stable glow. If this was vapour you'd think it would look a bit more vapoury i.e dynamic. :) The pump is still going also - shouldn't that vapour be pretty much sucked straight out of the bowl?

Do you really think every photon in that video, or any other glow you've ever seen about a filament, can be entirely accounted for by ablation and/or reflection?
 
It is obviously not acting the same as a normal lightbulb, which lasts a million times longer without burning out. The vacuum is not total and it is burning in the remaining air.
 
  • Like
Likes   Reactions: davenn and Dale
I used to do a classroom demonstration that was similar to the one shown in the video but with a twist. Instead of placing the filament in a jar which was evacuated, I placed it under liquid nitrogen and turned the juice on. The filament glowed happily as long as it was submerged although the LN2 (understandably) boiled more rapidly. Specifically, the outline of the filament was well defined without the diffuse glow seen in this video. It looked like the wires in a toaster only brighter. I would agree with @Dale that it has something to do with residual air or the way the video was recorded.
 
  • Like
Likes   Reactions: Dale, PeroK and FactChecker
Byron Forbes said:
If you look at the video from 47-57 sec, it is a very stable glow. If this was vapour you'd think it would look a bit more vapoury i.e dynamic.
I disagree. He is almost certainly exceeding the dynamic range of the pixels. I would expect it to be completely uniform and maxed out, but that cannot be confirmed without the original data.

Byron Forbes said:
The pump is still going also - shouldn't that vapour be pretty much sucked straight out of the bowl?
Good point. That indicates that ablated tungsten is more likely than powder. Tungsten would continue to ablate, whereas any powder or coating would burn off.

Byron Forbes said:
Do you really think every photon in that video, or any other glow you've ever seen about a filament, can be entirely accounted for by ablation and/or reflection?
No. I also think there is substantial glare. There may also be other sources that I haven’t considered.

Why? What other mechanism comes to your mind?
 
  • #10
Dale said:
Why? What other mechanism comes to your mind?
Post #4, I would imagine. Not that it makes any sense.
 
  • #11
Dale said:
No. I also think there is substantial glare. There may also be other sources that I haven’t considered.

Why? What other mechanism comes to your mind?

I was suggesting it might be evidence of photons being created outside of the filament by the magnet field. This in turn might suggest a longitudinal wave in the luminiferous aether. A luminiferous aether that is comprised of particles that are a magnetic analogue of electric matter.

Ignorantly enough, I somehow overlooked evaporation of the filament that clearly goes a long way to explaining such observations. But does it go all the way?

And now that I think on an experiment along these lines, it is no doubt impossible to find any material that could be heated to a point where it might glow but wouldn't evaporate, so this looks like a dead end as far as trying to show any photon emission from a point of origin other than the filament.
 
  • #12
Byron Forbes said:
I was suggesting it might be evidence of photons being created outside of the filament by the magnet field. This in turn might suggest a longitudinal wave in the luminiferous aether. A luminiferous aether that is comprised of particles that are a magnetic analogue of electric matter.
So there is a scientific adage that says “Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence”. So for a theory like what you describe, a you tube video of something glowing would never reach that threshold.

It would require a really carefully controlled experiment and a similarly careful quantitative derivation which showed that the experimental results are quantitatively incompatible with relativity but explained by this alternative theory.

FYI, there has recently been somewhat of a renaissance of experimental tests of relativity. Some candidates of quantum gravity violate relativity in specific ways. These are exquisitely careful experiments with solid theoretical analysis and motivation. So far they have all simply confirmed relativity to even higher precision.

What you seem to want to do is extraordinarily difficult, and is being attempted but unsuccessfully to date. It will not happen on YouTube
 
  • Like
Likes   Reactions: nasu and epenguin
  • #13
Byron Forbes said:
A luminiferous aether that is comprised of particles that are a magnetic analogue of electric matter.
Uh ... seriously ?
 
  • Like
Likes   Reactions: davenn and hutchphd
  • #14
It depends on the surrounding environment. The filament certainly provides the energy, but anything that receives that energy can also respond by emitting light. In the case of that video, I think that the filament is burning in the remaining air. That is a chemical reaction that is an entirely different process from the normal lightbulb.
 
  • Like
Likes   Reactions: Dale
  • #15
Byron Forbes said:
This in turn might suggest a longitudinal wave in the luminiferous aether. A luminiferous aether that is comprised of particles that are a magnetic analogue of electric matter.

Instead of searching for things that "violate" relativity, I would recommend learning it first. Alongside with some electrodynamics and quantum mechanics to understand what photon is (not).
 
  • Like
Likes   Reactions: nasu, phinds and Dale
  • #16
phinds said:
Uh ... seriously ?

Uh...yeah!
 
  • Haha
  • Skeptical
Likes   Reactions: davenn and phinds
  • #17
weirdoguy said:
Instead of searching for things that "violate" relativity, I would recommend learning it first. Alongside with some electrodynamics and quantum mechanics to understand what photon is (not).

Photons are easy - a piece of energy traveling through the magnetic aether.

Is everyone here disciples of the 2nd postulate are they?
 
  • Haha
  • Sad
Likes   Reactions: davenn and weirdoguy
  • #18
With that I think we will close the thread. The reason physicists accept relativity is because of the overwhelming experimental evidence. It has met and surpassed the “extraordinary evidence” requirement I mentioned above. Here is my favorite summary.

https://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/physics/Relativity/SR/experiments.html#Tests_of_the_poR

Please note, this forum requires that all posts be consistent with the professional scientific literature. If you wish to argue a violation of relativity on this forum then the burden of proof required here is a published scientific source. Ad hominem cries of “discipleship” are wholly insufficient.
 
  • Like
Likes   Reactions: nasu, davenn, phinds and 4 others

Similar threads

Replies
12
Views
2K
  • · Replies 1 ·
Replies
1
Views
2K
  • · Replies 0 ·
Replies
0
Views
754
  • · Replies 5 ·
Replies
5
Views
2K
  • · Replies 29 ·
Replies
29
Views
3K
Replies
3
Views
2K
  • · Replies 7 ·
Replies
7
Views
5K
  • · Replies 81 ·
3
Replies
81
Views
7K
  • · Replies 16 ·
Replies
16
Views
3K
  • · Replies 15 ·
Replies
15
Views
4K