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A electromagnetic wave has two properties. One electrical and one magnetic, perpendicular to each other.That means that they are placed at a 90 degree angle to each other(somewhat like two 'sine waves', one vertical, the other horizontal but bound together) .http://rh5.clemson.edu/ropermtn/EMbasics.php
But that doesn't really explain their 'particle like' properties as I see it.On the other hand I can't see them as being the same as matter.So?
momentum?
"Are not gross Bodies and Light convertible into one another, and may not Bodies receive much of their Activity from the particles of Light which enter their Composition?The changing of Bodies into Light, and Light into Bodies, is very conformable to the Course of Nature, which seems delighted with Transmutations. [...] And among such various and strange transmutations, why may not Nature change Bodies into Light, and Light into Bodies?“IsaacNewton - Optics 1704, Book Three, Part 1 Qu.30
Vern:Have you any 'size' for the picture you have drawn for a photon? How does it relate to the wavelength of the em, concerned?
To yor_on and Vern you are both neglecting rotational polarisation all photons have rotational polarisation otherwise polaroid glasses wouldn't work.
QuoteVern:Have you any 'size' for the picture you have drawn for a photon? How does it relate to the wavelength of the em, concerned?Hi; yes the size in wavelength is from the forward tip to the rearward tip. This is the classical photon that was taught in school back some 40 years ago when I went to school.
To yor_on and Vern you are both neglecting rotational polarisation all photons have rotational polarisation otherwise polaroid glasses wouldn't work. The normal solution is double rotation, which produces a circular tube within a tube so i did cheat a bit with the spring analogy it's for single rotational polarisation for the P1(cos(theta) solution but higher order solution do produce springs within springs even with double rotational polarisation P4(cos(theta) is a good example.
That's yet another problem with insisting on the existence of photons 'on the way from a to b'.
The interaction of a photon with an atom ( or something) must take time because it is a resonance phenomenon - the effect needs time to build up.
Unless there is an infinite bandwidth, photons can't be regarded as taking up just one cycle.