- #71
Salman2
- 95
- 0
From this book: Lecture Notes in Physics: The Nature of the Elementary Particle, 1978. Malcolm H. MacGregor, it is stated (in quotes):
"The particle properties of the photon emerge most clearly from Compton scattering, in which a high-energy photon makes a billiard-ball type of collision with an electron, and hence delivers its energy and momentum into a volume that has dimensions on the order of 10^-11 cm (the Compton wavelength of the electron)."
The "particle" aspect of the photon from Compton scattering experiments represents a "MeV photon" compared to an "optical-frequency wave photon" that is about 10^6 times larger in dimension.
"In dealing with the photon, we must take into account both its wave aspects and its particle aspects. But since these two aspects differ dimensionally by many orders of magnitude, they are in a practical sense separate entities, so that we can discuss the wave properties of the photon without having to consider its particle properties, and vice versa."
"The particle properties of the photon emerge most clearly from Compton scattering, in which a high-energy photon makes a billiard-ball type of collision with an electron, and hence delivers its energy and momentum into a volume that has dimensions on the order of 10^-11 cm (the Compton wavelength of the electron)."
The "particle" aspect of the photon from Compton scattering experiments represents a "MeV photon" compared to an "optical-frequency wave photon" that is about 10^6 times larger in dimension.
"In dealing with the photon, we must take into account both its wave aspects and its particle aspects. But since these two aspects differ dimensionally by many orders of magnitude, they are in a practical sense separate entities, so that we can discuss the wave properties of the photon without having to consider its particle properties, and vice versa."