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physixlover
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Does light have a definite shape? (this may be stupid question but from many days this question is hanging in my brain
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Anti-Meson said:Light doesn't have a shape in the same sense a tennisball has shape (sphere).
Light is neither wave nor particle but both. Confusing eh?
physixlover said:yes confused,it's not a partice nor a wave,but how is this possible
I tend to disagree with this type of statement. We have a very accurate theory called QED that completely describes the behavior of light. AFAIK there is no indication that QED fails to accurately predict any aspect of light's behavior. In other words it is both accurate and complete.Anti-Meson said:Truth be told, we don't exactly know what light is. It both demonstrates particle properties (see photoelectric effect) and wave properties (see diffraction), though it is neither one of them singularly and yet both simultaneously.
DaleSpam said:I tend to disagree with this type of statement. We have a very accurate theory called QED that completely describes the behavior of light. AFAIK there is no indication that QED fails to accurately predict any aspect of light's behavior. In other words it is both accurate and complete.
As far as I am concerned, that means that we do know what light is. There is a philosophical sense in which we cannot know what anything is, but from a scientific standpoint I think that solipsism-type argument is completely pointless. The problem is not that we don't know what light is, it is just that we have a lot of linguistic baggage.
DaleSpam said:So, why is that a problem as long as it accurately predicts the behavior?
DaleSpam said:The description in QED is completely unified. There is no dichotomy between wave and particle in QED and all of the behaviors are predicted in a single framework.
DaleSpam said:I tend to disagree with this type of statement. We have a very accurate theory called QED that completely describes the behavior of light. AFAIK there is no indication that QED fails to accurately predict any aspect of light's behavior. In other words it is both accurate and complete.
As far as I am concerned, that means that we do know what light is. There is a philosophical sense in which we cannot know what anything is, but from a scientific standpoint I think that solipsism-type argument is completely pointless. The problem is not that we don't know what light is, it is just that we have a lot of linguistic baggage.
I think you are missing my whole point. There is a lot of linguistic baggage associated with the English words "particle" and "wave", neither of which in common-usage adequately expresses what light is. This is not the case with the math of QED which accurately and completely characterizes light in one single unified way with no disparity.Anti-Meson said:I am not arguing about the validity of QED, its probably the success story of the 20th century in physics. The problem is that we classify light as particles and waves when we know it cannot be just a wave nor just a particle, it is either both simultaneously. Or it is neither and something we have yet to discover.
DaleSpam said:I think you are missing my whole point. There is a lot of linguistic baggage associated with the English words "particle" and "wave", neither of which in common-usage adequately expresses what light is. This is not the case with the math of QED which accurately and completely characterizes light in one single unified way with no disparity.
You say that light cannot be "just a wave nor just a particle", but that is not correct. It is a particle, but in the full sense of the QED usage of the word "particle". In QED particles have a single unified framework which shows diffraction, interference, reflection, and all of the other traditional "wave" aspects of light's behavior as well as scattering, quantization and all of the other traditional "particle" aspects of light's behavior. This single unified concept is called a "particle", but just like you can understand the difference between "banking to the right" and "banking with CitiBank" you should be able to understand the differences between a "classical particle" and a "quantum particle".
Light is a particle which behaves as described by QED.
That isn't correct. QED is a comprehensive theory of light. It doesn't have the limitation you are saying it has. There is no aspect that it can't explain while the wave theory can.Anti-Meson said:Aye, I am not disagreeing with you. But I think you are missing my point, light is a phenomenon which cannot only be described as a particle as described by QED but also as a wave in classical physics. Both areas of physics can explain what the other one can't so it is fruitless to say the QED is the definitive theory on light.
Again, the wave theory is wrong, the particle theory is wrong, QED is right. [fixed spelling mistake]Here is my argument: The fact that we have this disparity in classifying light means we are unable to singularly point at one theory and say that is the correct one. We simply don't know.
Light is light.Due to this disparity, I ask you a question to which I invite your answer, what is light?
russ_watters said:DaleSpam is right - the way I see it is this entire issue is based on the English language not having a one word description for what light is (other than saying it is just light).
russ_watters said:It's not a wave and not a particle - it is light! Again, the wave theory is wrong, the particle theory is wrong, QED is light. Light is light.
I'm not really concerned with the philosophy here, which I consider to be just argumentative and pointless. What I am concerned with is your assertion that QED can't describe all of light's behavior. This assertion is just plain factually wrong.Anti-Meson said:I have posed a purely philosophical question to which you have provided a lousy answer.
This is wrong. QED does not have any such limitation. If you disagree then please specifically identify which aspect of light's behavior classical physics can describe that QED cannot.Anti-Meson said:light is a phenomenon which cannot only be described as a particle as described by QED but also as a wave in classical physics. Both areas of physics can explain what the other one can't so it is fruitless to say the QED is the definitive theory on light.
Your argument is flawed because there is no such disparity, QED is accurate and complete. We can point at QED and say that it is the correct theory because it accurately describes all the observed behaviors of light. I have said it already, but I am glad to repeat my answer to your question: Light is a particle as described by QED.Anti-Meson said:Here is my argument: The fact that we have this disparity in classifying light means we are unable to singularly point at one theory and say that is the correct one. We simply don't know. Due to this disparity, I ask you a question to which I invite your answer, what is light?
Anti-Meson said:First you say light is light, then you say QED is light, then light is light again. Which is it to be? I have posed a purely philosophical question to which you have provided a lousy answer. C'mon guys you can do better than this.
Anti-Meson said:The only problem with QED is that is treats light as a particle.
The same is true of Newtonian mechanics. That is hardly a failure of a theory, but rather a failure of the education system.madmike159 said:its described using maths beyond most people
DaleSpam said:The same is true of Newtonian mechanics. That is hardly a failure of a theory, but rather a failure of the education system.
emc2cracker said:Light is both a particle and a wave is it not? I know we do not understand light completely, and I think light is the key to understanding the beginning of the universe. But I do think we can safely say that light is both particle and wave, maybe not in a perfect sense but maybe that's only because it IS both and by being both it cannot fit into one side or the other perfectly.
I work with wavelengths of light daily, mostly infared. So I am partial to the waveform of light.. I would say light is more wave than particle... but I'm biased I'm a cable tv tech I only work with wavelengths, RF for analog signals, infared for fiber optics.
emc2cracker said:Light is both a particle and a wave is it not? I know we do not understand light completely, and I think light is the key to understanding the beginning of the universe. But I do think we can safely say that light is both particle and wave, maybe not in a perfect sense but maybe that's only because it IS both and by being both it cannot fit into one side or the other perfectly.
I work with wavelengths of light daily, mostly infared. So I am partial to the waveform of light.. I would say light is more wave than particle... but I'm biased I'm a cable tv tech I only work with wavelengths, RF for analog signals, infared for fiber optics.
Tao-Fu said:You will do yourself a lot of favors if you avoid making statements containing "is" in that way. Fundamentally, we can never really address what anything "is". We can only perceive and communicate these perceptions to each other. We can tabulate observed properties of things but we cannot get at any fundamental "is"ness of them.
I think the whole mess can be avoided by just sidestepping this unanswerable question. I can safely say that under certain conditions light exhibits properties that seem particle-like, and under other conditions it exhibits properties that seem wave-like.
Born2bwire said:F95toli has stated pretty closely how QED describes light. As has been stated before, when we talk about particles in the QED sense there is a lot of extra baggage that comes with the term that is not used in the classical sense...
...Once again I will defer to referencing two of Art Hobson's papers. These are two sort papers about teaching students the electron matter wave in hopes of clarifying the electron interference pattern. Despite focusing on electrons, the quantum field model for electron wave and light waves are the same.
http://physics.uark.edu/hobson/pubs/07.02.TPT.pdf
http://physics.uark.edu/hobson/pubs/05.03.AJP.pdf
An interesting statement is done in that document:Born2bwire said:...
Once again I will defer to referencing two of Art Hobson's papers. These are two sort papers about teaching students the electron matter wave in hopes of clarifying the electron interference pattern. Despite focusing on electrons, the quantum field model for electron wave and light waves are the same.
http://physics.uark.edu/hobson/pubs/07.02.TPT.pdf
Ok. Now the question is: where is that single point? In the space between source and detector or at detector location?LukeD said:All interactions with photons in QED are at single points, so we can say that as far as QED is concerned, photons are single points.