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jbergman
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- TL;DR Summary
- Does a single photon still exhibit a doppler shift?
I'm trying to understand the Energy-Momentum relativistic relationships for a light particles. It is commonly said that the Energy of a photon depends on the observer by the relationship ## E = - \mathbf{p} \cdot \mathbf{u}## where p is the 4-momentum of the source emitting light particles and u is the 4-velocity of the observer.
The way I understand this physical effect to occur is via relativistic doppler shift that results in a change in frequency as described here, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Relativistic_Doppler_effect
However, if you have a single photon emitted by a source do these equations still hold? I am struggling to see how the reasoning would still apply since the doppler effect relies the distance between multiple wavefronts from different photons, I assume.
The way I understand this physical effect to occur is via relativistic doppler shift that results in a change in frequency as described here, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Relativistic_Doppler_effect
However, if you have a single photon emitted by a source do these equations still hold? I am struggling to see how the reasoning would still apply since the doppler effect relies the distance between multiple wavefronts from different photons, I assume.