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weird stuff I like your questions Johann.
This is probably a very silly question, but that does not seem to have stopped me in the past.If photons could cancel each other out, where would their energies go?
*In the region where they interfere destructively* there are no photons. But if you start from two beams of light and you make them interfere (example: two opposed laser beams), there will be regions of destructive and regions of constructive interference, and the total number of photons won't vary.
This is a quantum mechanics question; photons are quantum mechanical particles.The answer is that the photons' wavefunction will essentially bend around the points where the interference occurs.This is actually almost exactly the same as the dual slit experiment.
Quote from: lightarrow on 05/06/2011 19:08:46*In the region where they interfere destructively* there are no photons. But if you start from two beams of light and you make them interfere (example: two opposed laser beams), there will be regions of destructive and regions of constructive interference, and the total number of photons won't vary.Thanks for the reply.If the waves consist of one wave length each,what will be the end result.Will the total number of photons be the same?Will the waves annihilate one another?
Two waves can only annihilate each other perfectly if they start at exactly the same point at exactly the same time with opposite phase. In the real world, there's no photons emitted in the first place like that.
If two laser are pointing to each other and two photons are generated in antiphase at exactly the same time.Are you saying that this is not possible?
If two waves approach each other, and they are:1) in antiphase 2) Identical in frequency 3) At the same orientationThen:If the waves are in the ocean they will cancel out and there will be a calm section of ocean.If the waves are in the air then there will be quite section of air with no sound present.If the waves are running from both ends of a rope,then after they collide the rope will have no ripples.
Johann Mahne asked the Naked Scientists:...If the waves are running from both ends of a rope,then after they collide the rope will have no ripples....RegardsJohannWhat do you think?
They will pass through each other in this case, as if nothing is coming from the other end.