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| Tags: also, create, electron, photons, then |
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#1
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Wikipedia says that higher intensity (I believe higher
intensity(kelvins) means more photons) can also create heavier particles? Therefore that must also imply that not only 2 photons can create an electron but also that ****MORE**** then 2 photons can also create one electron? -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- AAA) There must be an important QUANTUM EFFECT in the discussion above since the annihilation of an electron/positron regenerates photons....the question is how many photons? The meaning of #AAA suggests multiple photons(intensity) can be converted into only two photons traveling at a higher frequency which must be an important quantum principal? |
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#2
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#3
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On May 19, 9:11 am, Tom Roberts wrote:
wrote: [...] You have written several posts GUESSING about conversion of multiple photons into massive particles. Your GUESSES have no validity. But we do know quite a lot about such processes. Most of our knowledge is summarized in conservation laws: A) 4-momentum is conserved B) charge is conserved C) angular momentum is conserved D) parity is conserved, at least approximately (and for processes involving photons the approximation is extremely good) E) lepton number is conserved, at least approximately (and for processes involving photons the approximation is extremely good) F) baryon number is approximately conserved (and for processes involving photons the approximation is extremely good) I'm talking about two photons colliding together to produce matter and your talking about lepton and baryon conservation? Photons have letpon and baryon numbers before the collision?? Where as Momentum Conservation is understandable but not lepton and baryon? No violations of (A), (B), or (C) are known. (D) can be violated in weak processes, (E) is violated in neutrino oscillations, and (F) is only an approximate symmetry of the standard model. Violations of the last three become more important at higher energy. So, for instance: (A) prevents a single photon from decaying or producing any massive particles, or multiple massless particles Strange how a virtual em wave can decay into particles (quarks) and even produce the stronger gluon force? (B) and (E) require that any number of photons creating massive particles will produce them in pairs with opposite charge. (A) plus (B) imply that every particle has an antiparticle (but some neutral particles are their own antiparticles). As for "multiple photons producing an electron", (B) requires that electron pairs be produced (i.e. e+ e-). (C) and (D) require that the number of photons involved be even. And note it is VERY difficult to get two elementary particles to intersect close enough to interact[*]; 3 or more is essentially impossible. For instance, at the various particle colliders, two bunches of particles collide periodically; each bunch contains 10^10 particles or more, but at each crossing only a handful of interactions occur; the bunches are typically a few microns in diameter, and a few cm long (moving at 0.999 c in opposite directions relative to the lab) -- details depend on which machine one considers. [*] ignoring their classical Coulomb interaction, if they are charged. Tom Roberts Regardless you snipped away at what I wrote without specifying at which part of the analogy I wrote strays off course. As I wrote: two single photons can become multiple photons, followed by the simple explanation of what can occur after these two photons produce two particles which later-on these particles can generate into multiple photons (thus you start with 2 photons and end-up with multiple photons (multiple quanta units). |
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#4
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On May 19, 5:47 am, " wrote:
Wikipedia says that higher intensity (I believe higher intensity(kelvins) means more photons) can also create heavier particles? Therefore that must also imply that not only 2 photons can create an electron but also that ****MORE**** then 2 photons can also create one electron? ---------------------------------------------------------------------------*----------------- AAA) There must be an important QUANTUM EFFECT in the discussion above since the annihilation of an electron/positron regenerates photons....the question is how many photons? The meaning of #AAA suggests multiple photons(intensity) can be converted into only two photons traveling at a higher frequency which must be an important quantum principal? The logic once again is that since 2 photons at high frequency or multiple photons (high intensity) according to wikipedia can also make the very same particles after collision thus we may be permitted to conclude when these particles decay/annihilate due to conservation laws then likewise 2 or multiple photons can be created. Thus through success reactions(collisions/annihilations) you can have 2 photons produce multiple photons and vice-versa (quanta and momentum perserved). |
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#5
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On May 19, 5:47 am, " wrote:
Wikipedia says that higher intensity (I believe higher intensity(kelvins) means more photons) can also create heavier particles? Therefore that must also imply that not only 2 photons can create an electron but also that ****MORE**** then 2 photons can also create one electron? ---------------------------------------------------------------------------*----------------- AAA) There must be an important QUANTUM EFFECT in the discussion above since the annihilation of an electron/positron regenerates photons....the question is how many photons? The meaning of #AAA suggests multiple photons(intensity) can be converted into only two photons traveling at a higher frequency which must be an important quantum principal? Viewing the respect & importance attributed to Fienman diagrams (foundation of nuclear technology) due to particle/photon behaviors, then AS WELL the above behaviors that occur after multiple Fienman processes should demand the ***SAME*** attention and importance (and signify a new important quantum principal)? |
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