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Higher power photons have shorter wavelengths than lower power photons. This means they transfer their energy quicker. But the total amount of energy transferred is the same for all. You can fire a beam of low power photons at (say) a piece of aluminium and it will not knock any electrons from the aluminium irrespective of how intense the photon beam is. The higher power photons will knock electrons from the aluminium irrespective of the intensity of the photon beam. This fact was discovered by Einstein in his basic quantum research. ...
OK, I have made a big mistake. ........ the E=hf equation that it does exactly what physics says it does.
h = 7 therefore E*t = 7 t = 1/fthereforeE*(1/f)= 7therefore E= 7fthereforeE= hfand, thereforeE = energy of a photon = the energy of one oscillation of the photon.
This is garbage.
OK, I have made a big mistake. Many humble apologies for wasting your times.
For a start h really really isn't 7.
These have been experimentally verified. He should go to the new theory forum if he wants to prove otherwise. He's claiming something is true which cannot be experimentally verified and therefore has no place in physics.
As a lay person,
That was a nice link Mxp, but I think that equation is about the energy of a particle, as a electron
E=hf relates to the energy of an electromagnetic wave, not a photon.
Apparently, the results in double slit experiment for a single cannot be repeated using the E=hf equation.
This seems to involve 3 energies, the forward direction energy, the sideways electro wave energy and the sideways magnetic wave energy. The implications of this for a photon seem to have been overlooked by the physics community.
I photon is supposed to have no mass
Where then does its momentum come from
what is the equation for the momentum?
Quote from: mxplxxx on Today at 03:15:43Where then does its momentum come fromRelativistic mass.
Quote from: mxplxxx on Yesterday at 03:15:43Apparently, the results in double slit experiment for a single cannot be repeated using the E=hf equation.Sorry, would you like to rewrite that? It doesn't make sense