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Virtual photons mediate action at a distance and come into play for instance when one magnet or electrically charged body attracts another hence they must have a non zero lifetime else their speed would be infinite
My evil doppelganger has made an identically named post but has been banished to the hogwash sector
The term virtual particle has different meanings. From the HUP they exist everywhere, and is evidenced by the Casimir force.
Virtual particles are, in principle, mathematical artifacts invented for the purpose of calculations of interactions between particles…………… If you don't use perturbation theory, then you don't need virtual particles at all.
Quote from: Flummoxed The term virtual particle has different meanings. From the HUP they exist everywhere, and is evidenced by the Casimir force. My understanding is that what Casimir showed was the reality of quantum fluctuations in the vacuum, and that the wave interpretation of these fluctuations was essential to the success of the experiment. If one chooses to describe these “waves” as particles, so be it, but there are some things worth considering.https://www.quora.com/What-are-virtual-particles-in-laymans-terms-What-do-they-provide-What-is-their-significanceQuote Virtual particles are, in principle, mathematical artifacts invented for the purpose of calculations of interactions between particles…………… If you don't use perturbation theory, then you don't need virtual particles at all.
BTW - how many posts before a newbie can start a topic?
A virtual particle mediates an interaction. Presumably, this interaction occurs in time, but is often described as being “instantaneous”. This must involve looking at the concept of instantaneous speed. When the speed of an object is changing constantly, its instantaneous speed is its speed at a particular instant in time. This “instant” is a dimensionless point on a time-line. It is part of the scenario of time, but does not include the concept of duration.
I'm pretty sure the lifetime is inversely proportional to energy due to the uncertainty principle.
As far as I know a virtual particle should be under Plank time? If it wasn't wouldn't you have to call it 'real'? Then again, maybe it can 'exist' over that threshold but then I think physics would need to define where a 'perfect instrument' will fail to measure it. It's a pretty good question actually.
Quote from: yor_on on 16/04/2019 18:09:48As far as I know a virtual particle should be under Plank time? If it wasn't wouldn't you have to call it 'real'? Then again, maybe it can 'exist' over that threshold but then I think physics would need to define where a 'perfect instrument' will fail to measure it. It's a pretty good question actually.Relativistic speaking if a virtual particle can be accelerated to c it would not experience time.