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Ok, I'll try to break it down.1. I wrote "Are you saying that only a 'quark gluon soup' will 'break down' atoms.And that photons can't do that to a single atom.Well, I was wondering in what way radiation (photons) might 'break down' a atom.shouldn't it be able to? "
2. " I understand what you say about temperature being a statistical concept .But as soon we have photons interacting with a atom it will be a 'real' concept again, right? " (that is, a 'working again' concept)
3. What then followed was just me wondering where that definition might have originated.
I wrote "Am I right in assuming that this reasoning goes back to that nothing can be seen as having any values without having any 'interaction' and subsequent, or, 'observation'."
Quote from: yor_on on 18/01/2009 22:50:54Ok, I'll try to break it down.1. I wrote "Are you saying that only a 'quark gluon soup' will 'break down' atoms.And that photons can't do that to a single atom.Well, I was wondering in what way radiation (photons) might 'break down' a atom.shouldn't it be able to? "About 'quark gluon soup' I don't think physicists knows a lot more than the bare name, and you want to discuss the effects on an atom? Optimist! []Photons can break down an atom by:a) giving it enough energy to expel electrons through electromagnetic interaction;b) kick off electrons through Compton scattering (higher energies);c) collide with nuclei breaking them apart (even higher energies)... don't know (even higher energies);Quote2. " I understand what you say about temperature being a statistical concept .But as soon we have photons interacting with a atom it will be a 'real' concept again, right? " (that is, a 'working again' concept)Can you make a specific example of what you want to say? For example (don't know): "Given a single free atom in space....interacting in this way...with a photon...is it possible to say that the atom's temperature is varied?" or anything else, but very specific, please.Quote3. What then followed was just me wondering where that definition might have originated.You mean the definition of temperature? It comes from thermodynamics, which consider macroscopic, not microscopic, objects. Temperature is defined as the Average kinetic energy of the particles when they are in thermal equilibrium, that is when they have already exchanged their energies in a way that depends on the system considered, for example for an atomic gas the distribution of their velocities must be a Maxwellian. Do you find a simple way to extrapolate from this the concept of temperature for a few or, worse, for a single particle?QuoteI wrote "Am I right in assuming that this reasoning goes back to that nothing can be seen as having any values without having any 'interaction' and subsequent, or, 'observation'."This has "half" to do with the concept of temperature; half because it doesn't consider the fact that temperature is defined for macroscopic objects only.
Thanks Lightarrow, I can see why you balked at my question(s)So temperature is a concept for macroscopic objects.Can one define what happens as 'temperature' when one isolate a atom and then 'shoot' photons on it with a laser?
Reading what you wrote I started to look for it on the net. I must admit that until now I've never wondered about what the properties/interactions of just one atom might be though.http://www.sciencecentric.com/news/article.php?q=08041422But they define it as a molecule?Why?It is one atom and photon(s) interacting?To be a molecule they must treat the photons as particles it seems to me?((My kind of scientists:
Hi Guys Thanks for your conversation ,I have Learned a great deal and now possibly see temperature as a different concept when applied to a single atom ,If I understand it right .Temperature is the interaction between atoms in groups ie in molecules .but when you get to the atomic level then energy is the currency of temperature ,be it from photons or any other source .So effectivly then atoms dont melt or cannot melt at any enegy level ,but they can be smasshed ie cern etc .Is it possible then for the constituent parts be totally destroyed ?or am I into the realms of matter anti matter?Geoff