- #1
Skyler0114
- 22
- 0
Sorry if I posted this in the wrong forum, to me it looks like this forum is for high energy, nuclear, OR particle physics.
I was wondering if anybody could help me with this.
I was trying to ask my teacher about the nature of energy transfer, and she said something that I really believe is wrong.
I asked if there were any conclusions we could make about the properties of photons being exchanged between particles in a propagating sound wave, and she said that sound and light were two different things, and that 'light' was not emitted when the particles were vibrating.
I really think she's wrong, because of the following rational:
In a sound wave the particles are
the atoms are 'bouncing' off of each due to electrostatic repulsion between their electron shells,this must mean that electromagnetic forces are involved. By taking the fact that all forces require a carrier and that the carrier of electromagnetism is the photon (or photon virtual particle), I reach the conclusion that:
photons are exchanged between atoms as energy propagates from the source of the sound and that as the energy is distributed then either the number of interactions a distance away from the source is less or the photons exchanged are less energetic (I would bet on the first one at being first order and the second being second order).
Is there something I am not considering that makes my assumption invalid, and if not all transfers of energy between the force carriers of particles, then what is the truth.
I was wondering if anybody could help me with this.
I was trying to ask my teacher about the nature of energy transfer, and she said something that I really believe is wrong.
I asked if there were any conclusions we could make about the properties of photons being exchanged between particles in a propagating sound wave, and she said that sound and light were two different things, and that 'light' was not emitted when the particles were vibrating.
I really think she's wrong, because of the following rational:
In a sound wave the particles are
the atoms are 'bouncing' off of each due to electrostatic repulsion between their electron shells,this must mean that electromagnetic forces are involved. By taking the fact that all forces require a carrier and that the carrier of electromagnetism is the photon (or photon virtual particle), I reach the conclusion that:
photons are exchanged between atoms as energy propagates from the source of the sound and that as the energy is distributed then either the number of interactions a distance away from the source is less or the photons exchanged are less energetic (I would bet on the first one at being first order and the second being second order).
Is there something I am not considering that makes my assumption invalid, and if not all transfers of energy between the force carriers of particles, then what is the truth.