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Kruger
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Where does a photon in vacuum come from if it creates a pair? In QFT there shoudn't be a photon available in vacuum because the number operator is zero.
Kruger said:Where does a photon in vacuum come from if it creates a pair? In QFT there shoudn't be a photon available in vacuum because the number operator is zero.
You need to distinguish between two things here. Virtual particles either arise because of vacuum fluctuations, but they also originate as the force mediating particles between matter particles. In your example, the energy for the virtual particles does NOT come from the vacuum but comes from the actual interaction between two matter particles. If you have two electrons that interact via the exchange of a virtual photons, then this photon arises as the fluctuation of a spin 1 field (this is a tricky issue however because of the zero photon mass). These fluctuations are caused by the two electrons. Think of the two electrons as if they were sitting on a mattress that will start to vibrate. These vibrations correspond to the virtual particle that goes from one electron to another. Both repulsive and attractive forces are treated this way in QFT. A force is represented by the exchange of this virtual particle that transports a definite momentum and therefore (because of HUP) the field corresponding to this virtual particle is everywhere in space...This really needs to be the case because when working with Feynman diagrams and when calculating the photon propagator, we integrate over all spatial coordinates.Kruger said:If we put in a strong electric field Dirac's hole theory predicts virtual pair creation. But for this it is a virtual photon needed with many energy and ground state oscillation hasn't this energy.
the energy for the virtual particles does NOT come from the vacuum but comes from the actual interaction between two matter particles.
All the oscillators in the mattress are in their SAME lowest energy-state but each oscillator has virtual vibrations. So you have one particle with energy given by hbar*omega/2 but surrounded with many other virtual particles.
Kruger said:And another question about what you have written (journal).
If I look on quantum field theory then this mattresses don't contain particles. ?
Kruger said:But you wrote ""So you have one particle with energy given by ...""
All the oscillators in the mattress are in their SAME lowest energy-state but each oscillator has virtual vibrations. So you have one particle with energy given by hbar*omega/2 but surrounded with many other virtual particles.
Virtual particles either arise because of vacuum fluctuations, but they also originate as the force mediating particles between matter particles. In your example, the energy for the virtual particles does NOT come from the vacuum but comes from the actual interaction between two matter particles.
Kruger said:Sorry marlon.
I mean the last sentence you wrote. And I think that there aren't particles in the vacuum with this energy. (you wrote this in you journal (virtual particles)).
other energies are possible during a time delta t...Those are the virtual particles that arise and vanish shortly after.
Kruger said:So If there is created a virtual particle then the state of the mattress will raise. And after its annihilation the state will lower and go back to ground state.
These virtual particles (photons) are they a "product (intermediate state)" of
yes, that is the second possibility : ie the vacuum fluctuations or zero point energy fluctuations.or can they arise from vacuum (in case of virtual pair creation)?
In the case of pair creation the e+e- pair isn't there at the beginning and the virtual photon must be an off mass shell interacting particle, so fom where does this photon come from (which particle send it)?
Matter comes from the Big Bang, which is the event that is believed to have created the universe. During the Big Bang, energy was converted into matter, forming the building blocks of the universe such as atoms and subatomic particles.
Energy can come from various sources, such as the sun, nuclear reactions, or the Earth's core. The ultimate source of all energy in the universe is the Big Bang, as it is the event that created all matter and energy.
Water on Earth is believed to have originated from the early solar system, as water molecules were present in the gas and dust that formed the planets. Some water may also have been brought to Earth by comets and asteroids.
Elements are created through nuclear fusion in stars. This process involves combining lighter elements to form heavier elements. When a star dies, it can release these elements into space through a supernova, which can then form new stars and planets.
Humans evolved from earlier species through the process of natural selection. Our earliest human ancestors are believed to have originated in Africa and gradually spread to other parts of the world. Modern humans, Homo sapiens, evolved around 200,000 years ago.