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Why do you need a photon for this? A light pulse wouldn't work?
Ok, anyway, if you want to use the term "photon" because it's emitted or absorbed by an atom, you can't say it can be localized in flight. Either is a photon, with its quantum properties, or is a classical pulse of light; you can't mix the two in a sort of "chimeric" beast.
Quote from: lightarrow on 19/01/2013 14:13:05Ok, anyway, if you want to use the term "photon" because it's emitted or absorbed by an atom, you can't say it can be localized in flight. Either is a photon, with its quantum properties, or is a classical pulse of light; you can't mix the two in a sort of "chimeric" beast.I'm afraid that you’ve made the same mistake here that you’ve made in your previous posts. You say it can’t be done but give no proof. In this case you claim “you can't say it can be localized in flight” but don’t explain what that means or why you can’t say it and what it means not to be able to say something when in practice (i.e. in practical examples, math and all) it works just fine.
Lightarrow, is there any reason why you can't take a classical limit of the quantum theory to come up with classical photons like Pmb claims? That approach is certainly valid for electrons (and explains why we have "classical" electrons" when we know they also behave like waves in the 2 slit experiment).
All matter and energy has mass. Even the kinetic energy of an object has mass.
In fact, when you compress a spring, its mass increases... not detectably, but the potential energy added to the spring has its own contribution to the total mass.
Quote from: JP on 21/01/2013 16:43:56Lightarrow, is there any reason why you can't take a classical limit of the quantum theory to come up with classical photons like Pmb claims? That approach is certainly valid for electrons (and explains why we have "classical" electrons" when we know they also behave like waves in the 2 slit experiment).When you take the classical limit for a photon (h --> 0) it gets zero energy, so it disappears.
When you take the classical limit for a photon (h --> 0) it gets zero energy, so it disappears.
If you mean relativistic mass, ok.
Recall that in classical electrodynamics one can have a very small packet/burst of radiation (which can be described by a Fourier integral) which has enegy and momentum p. The relationship between them is a non-quantum mechanical relationship, i.e. E = pc. The shape of the light pulse can be selected such that the spatial extention is small enough for all practical purposes.
Yep, and a photon is usually defined similar to a Fourier component (monochromatic plane wave) of a pulse.
Quote from: lightarrowWhen you take the classical limit for a photon (h --> 0) it gets zero energy, so it disappears.(sigh!) I'm clearly sorry that I asked. That's wrong. If you were right then no classical particles exist in the classical limit. Don't forget what h physically means. I means that for every quantum mechanical particle that has inertial energy (defined as E = K + E0 = Kinetic Energy + Rest Energy) has an associated frequency given by the relationship E = hf. What does it mean to take h -> 0 for an electron? It means that there is no associated wavelength.
Quote from: AndroidNeox on 21/01/2013 17:44:02All matter and energy has mass. Even the kinetic energy of an object has mass. If you mean relativistic mass, ok. If you mean "mass", with this term it's usually intended "invariant" mass and then it's false
Quote from: lightarrow on 21/01/2013 19:12:37Quote from: AndroidNeox on 21/01/2013 17:44:02All matter and energy has mass. Even the kinetic energy of an object has mass. If you mean relativistic mass, ok. If you mean "mass", with this term it's usually intended "invariant" mass and then it's falseNaturally I'm referring to relativistic mass, since that's what the question is about. The rest mass doesn't change because it's never in motion and has no kinetic energy. I was specifically referring to kinetic energy having mass.
Certainly. However we should be more precise when we discuss this subject because it's very easy to make confusion. For example, saying "All matter and energy has mass. Even the kinetic energy of an object has mass" is very confusing: in the first sentence, matter has invariant mass, "energy has mass" is incorrect, since energy is "a property" of a body, and a property cannot have mass (as if I would say that a number has a colour); we should say instead that "a body which has energy has mass", but in this case is not always invariant mass...As you see, things are not so simple.
Quote from: lightarrow on 23/01/2013 21:19:32Certainly. However we should be more precise when we discuss this subject because it's very easy to make confusion. For example, saying "All matter and energy has mass. Even the kinetic energy of an object has mass" is very confusing: in the first sentence, matter has invariant mass, "energy has mass" is incorrect, since energy is "a property" of a body, and a property cannot have mass (as if I would say that a number has a colour); we should say instead that "a body which has energy has mass", but in this case is not always invariant mass...As you see, things are not so simple.Energy does have gravitational mass.
Put a kilogram of matter and one of antimatter into an impregnable box, like a Schrödinger cat box, and the mass of the box (any category of mass you care to choose) will not change when the contents annihilate each other. Even if the box only contains light, the mass(es) will not change.