Blooming Personalities C/D 30Th November
Quizzes & Puzzles71 mins ago
Is there I quantum physical explanation for a magnetic or electric field. I read Richard Feynman's Quantum Electrodynamic book and he says all electrodynamic phenonomen can be fundamentally explained by electrons and photons. Is this true, and if so how are magnetic and electric fields created.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Let me ask the question in a different way. Suppose you have two hydrogen atoms close to one another. One of them can absorb a photon, it's electron moves to a higher energy state, then returns and releases a photon of the same energy. This photon can be absorbed by the other hydrogen atom and the same thing can happen. Scientists can detect the energy or frequency of the photon and corrospondingly the energy states of the electron.
If you move these two hydrogen atoms closer together they will repel each other. Being an electric force assume something to do with photons is going on here. I also assume that something slightly different is going on than in the first paragraph above as I have never heard of electric fields having wavelength properties and these photons do. My question is what is happening between these two hydrogen atoms as they approach each other?
This is pushing at the boundries of my knowlege but...
The two hydrogen atoms cannot be thought of as "classical" atoms with solid nuclei and electrons wizzing around in orbits about them.
The electron shells are probability distributions and as the shells get closer to each other there is a greater probability of interaction.
This has to be treated in a quantum mechanical manner and that can be thought of as an exchange of virtual photons.
Virtual particles can pop in and out of existance as long as they do so for a short enough time to to violate the uncertainty principle which can be expressed as:
E.t > h/2 (E, Energy t, time, h, =Plank' s constant)
The following is a good link but to really understand this you probably need a good grasp of Quantum Mechanics
http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/physics/Quantum/virtual_pa rticles.html
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