maline said:
Thank you for answering(I was scared you had fried me!)
Please explain a bit more. Take a circle of radius 1mm in sunlight at noon. about how many photons will be creating electric fields at a given point in time, and about how much will the field total to?
This is not as trivial as you think.
"sunlight" is a combination of not only many different polarizations, but also many different wavelengths! This is not a monochromatic light source. So the "cancellation" here even less probable, because you have light with different frequencies, intensities, etc. Estimating the number of photon density doesn't help in dealing with your question.
But let me emphasize something. The occurrence of multiphoton photoemission using sunlight is negligible. Now, this statement may appear to be a complete tangent to the discussion, but multiphoton photoemission requires that a photon to excite an electron to an excited state, and within a short period of time before it decays back to a lower state, another one happens to hit it at the right time and the right place to cause another excitation. The probability of this occurring depends very much of the photon density, i.e. the higher the number of photons per unit area per unit time, the higher the probability that more than one photon can do the sequential excitation.
Such a process is negligible with sunlight that we receive on earth. In fact, the only time that I've encountered such multiphoton photoemission is using a very high-powered, Class 4 laser with energy of 10 mJ or more, and a spot size of 1 cm in diameter (we published a paper that included this effect).
Now note, this is ONLY tackling the issue of getting more than one photons to be hitting the same location within a very short period of time. This is LESS STRINGENT than having to have two photons, hitting the exact same spot, at the same time, and that just happens to have two completely opposite polarization. What are the odds?
Edit: There is also another issue here that we haven't touched. The typical interference pattern that we see is actually the result of
single-photon interference! It is not the interference of two or more photons. The physics of the latter is different than the former.
Zz.