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LightningInAJar
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What diameter does a photon have? Does it vary and if so within what range?
BvU said:Summary:: Interesting video about interpreting 'single photon' interference experiments
BvU said:Hi,
Can you please share with us your definition of 'diameter' in the context of photons ?
And give us a clue at what level you want your answer ?
More links etc in:##\ ##
A photon isn't a little ball with a well-defined size, nor is it a point particle. The questions you are asking aren't even well-defined and don't have meaningful answers.LightningInAJar said:Is a photon unlimited in size or 0 dimensional?
Can it only be represented as a long vibrating cylinder shape?PeterDonis said:A photon isn't a little ball with a well-defined size, nor is it a point particle. The questions you are asking aren't even well-defined and don't have meaningful answers.
The only real "size" that has meaning for a photon is its wavelength, and that is frame dependent.
I have no idea where that is even coming from. A photon doesn't have a "shape". It's nothing like an ordinary object.LightningInAJar said:Can it only be represented as a long vibrating cylinder shape?
This is the wrong way to think about it. The acuity of visual information depends on the size of the detecting elements (such as the rod and cone cells in your retina, or the CCD "pixels" in a digital camera's detector, or the size of the individual light-sensitive particles in photographic film) and the wavelength of the light. But the wavelength of the light is not the same as the "size" of any little ball or other ordinary object.LightningInAJar said:I am trying to imagine how many photons can be laid next to one another to produce the maximum amount of perceptible visual information from the physical world.
If we can't know a photon's size how do we know how many photo sensors it is stimulating? If big enough it could hit more than one?PeterDonis said:This is the wrong way to think about it. The acuity of visual information depends on the size of the detecting elements (such as the rod and cone cells in your retina, or the CCD "pixels" in a digital camera's detector, or the size of the individual light-sensitive particles in photographic film) and the wavelength of the light. But the wavelength of the light is not the same as the "size" of any little ball or other ordinary object.
Even if you know nothing else about a photon, you should know that it is a quantum of light. Its interaction with matter is all or nothing.LightningInAJar said:If we can't know a photon's size how do we know how many photo sensors it is stimulating? If big enough it could hit more than one?
LightningInAJar said:I am trying to imagine how many photons can be laid next to one another to produce the maximum amount of perceptible visual information from the physical world.
A single photon will never be received by more than one sensor. Photons are quantum mechanical, as others have commented.LightningInAJar said:If we can't know a photon's size how do we know how many photo sensors it is stimulating? If big enough it could hit more than one?
It's really best not to think in terms of a picture of a photon. The only time that a photon can be said to have 'been' anywhere is when it interacts with something. You can have no idea 'where' it was during the time delay between the emission of a photon and the detection of a photon. Bear in mind that a beam of light passing through a hole will have a diffraction pattern all around the edges. That implies something about the region over which a single quantum of that beam's energy (i.e. a photon) can be pretty big in wavelength terms. In fact, to work out the diffraction pattern, you really need to integrate from +∞ to -∞. Photons don't interact so that means every photon has to be regarded as being everywhere at some time. Not the sort of thing you could draw so not a lot of hope of visualising it.LightningInAJar said:Can it only be represented as a long vibrating cylinder shape?
To add to the confusion, one photons worth of light going through a lens must be interacting with all the glass for it to arrive at a statistically likely place (i.e. the Image). So the massive lens and the photon must 'know about each other'; it's not just one atom and one photon in the system.PeterDonis said:A single photon will never be received by more than one sensor. Photons are quantum mechanical, as others have commented.
The physics of nature at its smallest scale often has very poor analogies at our human-centric scale. Don't try to force analogies where there are none. Study it on its own merits.LightningInAJar said:Baffling. It's hard to imagine something that interacts with matter that shares so few of its properties. Kind of like it doesn't really exist in our world?
The questions you are asking don't make much more sense for matter (i.e., particles with nonzero rest mass) than they do for photons. There is no one well-defined "size" for an electron any more than there is for a photon.LightningInAJar said:It's hard to imagine something that interacts with matter that shares so few of its properties.
Nonsense. There are a huge number of directly observable phenomena that show that photons exist.LightningInAJar said:Kind of like it doesn't really exist in our world?
Upon measurement/interaction, you can bet it 100% exists. Outside this narrow context, photons are best treated as quanta of the electromagnetic fields.LightningInAJar said:Baffling. It's hard to imagine something that interacts with matter that shares so few of its properties. Kind of like it doesn't really exist in our world?
We can say that it doesn't exist in a form that we are familiar with. Its whole scale is so far outside out experience that it doesn't fit any of our cosy analogies with familiar objects.LightningInAJar said:Kind of like it doesn't really exist in our world?
I appreciate your honesty. From the later posts I sense interest and curiosity on the subject of the behaviour of light/photons, so we might try to find an inroad on a more accessible level. I highly recommend Richard Feynman's 'try-out'/layman lectures, given in Auckland (NZ) 1979. A solid block of six hours of physics with a big part dedicated to photons.LightningInAJar said:Interesting video, but honestly don't understand much of it.
I will check it out. Hopefully on YouTube also as that site doesn't appear secure.BvU said:I appreciate your honesty. From the later posts I sense interest and curiosity on the subject of the behaviour of light/photons, so we might try to find an inroad on a more accessible level. I highly recommend Richard Feynman's 'try-out'/layman lectures, given in Auckland (NZ) 1979. A solid block of six hours of physics with a big part dedicated to photons.
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feynman.com doesn't appear secure to you?LightningInAJar said:I will check it out. Hopefully on YouTube also as that site doesn't appear secure.
Doesn't seem to use encryption.berkeman said:feynman.com doesn't appear secure to you?
Huh ?LightningInAJar said:Doesn't seem to use encryption.
In fairness, I see now that my Firefox browser does show a warning about the link that was posted, saying that it's not secure. The little bitty warning icon was not obvious to me when I first clicked into the link.BvU said:Huh ?
Google 'feynman lecture auckland' and get 3 out of 4 on youtube. Better ?
A photon is a fundamental particle of light that carries energy and has no mass.
The diameter of a photon cannot be measured as it is considered a point particle with no physical size.
Yes, the diameter of a photon is believed to be constant, meaning it does not change with different energies or wavelengths.
No, the diameter of a photon is too small to be observed directly, even with advanced technology. It can only be inferred through its interactions with other particles.
The diameter of a photon is important in understanding the behavior and properties of light, as well as in the study of quantum mechanics and particle physics.