• @ziggurism
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    401 year ago

    Photons cannot accelerate

    • @Entropius
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      231 year ago

      Acceleration and Velocity are vectors. Changes in a velocity vector are an acceleration. Therefore when photons change direction technically it’s a form of acceleration.

      • @[email protected]
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        141 year ago

        I thought photons are always moving in straight lines from their perspective, and it’s space that’s bent. Unless it’s through a medium, then they just get absorbed and re-emitted, sort of.

        • @Entropius
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          1 year ago

          Space bending is a general relativity thing, which isn’t really related much to how mirrors work.

          Regarding the medium bit, photons being absorbed and remitted can’t explain how light moves slower in glass. This is just an extremely popular myth. Photons are only absorbed by atoms at very specific frequencies. Also, the entire reason glass is transparent to begin with is that it’s not absorbing the photons (requires too much energy to bump the electron’s energy level so the photon isn’t absorbed and it keeps on trucking). Also photon absorption and remission is stochastic so there’s no way to control the direction it happens in or how quickly it happens. Random directions of remitted light would make glass translucent, not transparent. So for a few reasons, that’s not how it works.

      • @ziggurism
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        11 year ago

        Ok but photons don’t change direction either. Treating photon scattering as an individual particle accelerating due to an applied force, well that’s just not a correct description of how perturbative QED models photon interactions.

      • Ook the Librarian
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        41 year ago

        Since photons are indistinguishable, it’s hard to say too much concretely, but it some sense a diffracted photon is different photon. In order for a photon to interact with say, a diffraction grating, the interaction is done with “virtual photons”.

        So for a photon to change course, aka accelerate, it does it by absorbing a virtual photon and emitting another. Whether that is the “same photon” after the interaction is kinda more philosophy than physics, at least to me.

        Feynman diagrams are surprisingly accessible for how much information they contain. It’s one way to think about photon (and other particle) reactions.

        • @ziggurism
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          21 year ago

          There is no tree level photon-photon interaction. Photons scatter off electrons (or any other charged particle), not off neutral photons.

          • Ook the Librarian
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            41 year ago

            Are you claiming this is done without a force carrier? If you are working outside the standard model, I guess that’s fine, but I don’t want to spend time arguing with you.

            • @ziggurism
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              1 year ago

              The electromagnetic field does have a force carrier. It is the photon.

              The photon mediates the force between electrically charged particles. It cannot mediate any reaction between two neutral photons.

              • Ook the Librarian
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                1 year ago

                Ah, I see. Sorry for the snark. I was thinking more in line with the Compton effect, and thought you were talking about something like that too. (Even though it’s clear that you were explicitly not. I thought you were denying photon-virtual photon interaction because I was talking about it in a funny way.)

                I would still say it’s still philosophical whether photons experience acceleration, but I concede that photon-photon interaction is not done by virtual photon exchange.

                • @ziggurism
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                  1 year ago

                  I am indeed denying the existence of photons interacting with virtual photons. I am also saying there is no tree level photon-photon interaction of on shell photons. Neither Compton scattering nor Bhabha nor pair production nor pair annihilation involves a photon-photon interaction. There is no photon-photon vertex in QED. There is no tree level Feynman diagram that you can look at and say “this is, at least philosophically, a photon changing its momentum”.

                  There is a 1 loop diagram that represents photon-photon scattering. But even that doesn’t have any photon-photon vertices, instead it is mediated by electron-positron pair.

                  Non-abelian gauge bosons (gluons) couple to themselves. So does gravity (gravitons). Abelian ones (photons) do not.

                  Photons don’t accelerate. They are emitted or absorbed. That’s their only interaction.

                  • Ook the Librarian
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                    31 year ago

                    Someone asked if diffracted light accelerated. I said no. A diffracted photon is a different photon.

                    I gave some lip service to the Feynman “there is but one electron” idea, and you seemed to take that personally.

                    If someone asks you if diffracted light accelerates, answer them how you want. I just thought it’d be cool to show them Feyman diagrams.