A photon (from Ancient Greek φῶς, φωτός (phôs, phōtós) 'light') is an elementary particle that is a quantum of the electromagnetic field, including electromagnetic radiation such as light and radio waves, and the force carrier for the electromagnetic force. Photons are massless particles that can move no faster than the speed of light measured in vacuum. The photon belongs to the class of boson particles.
Composition | Elementary particle |
---|---|
Statistics | Bosonic |
Family | Gauge boson |
Interactions | Electromagnetic, weak (and gravity) |
Symbol | γ |
Theorized | Albert Einstein (1905) The name "photon" is generally attributed to Gilbert N. Lewis (1926) |
Mass | 0 (theoretical value) < 1×10−18 eV/c2 (experimental limit) |
Mean lifetime | Stable |
Electric charge | 0 < 1×10−35 e |
Color charge | No |
Spin | 1 ħ |
Spin states | +1 ħ, −1 ħ |
Parity | −1 |
C parity | −1 |
Condensed | I(JP C)=0,1(1−−) |
As with other elementary particles, photons are best explained by quantum mechanics and exhibit wave–particle duality, their behavior featuring properties of both waves and particles. The modern photon concept originated during the first two decades of the 20th century with the work of Albert Einstein, who built upon the research of Max Planck. While Planck was trying to explain how matter and electromagnetic radiation could be in thermal equilibrium with one another, he proposed that the energy stored within a material object should be regarded as composed of an integer number of discrete, equal-sized parts. To explain the photoelectric effect, Einstein introduced the idea that light itself is made of discrete units of energy. In 1926, Gilbert N. Lewis popularized the term photon for these energy units. Subsequently, many other experiments validated Einstein's approach.
In the Standard Model of particle physics, photons and other elementary particles are described as a necessary consequence of physical laws having a certain symmetry at every point in spacetime. The intrinsic properties of particles, such as charge, mass, and spin, are determined by gauge symmetry. The photon concept has led to momentous advances in experimental and theoretical physics, including lasers, Bose–Einstein condensation, quantum field theory, and the probabilistic interpretation of quantum mechanics. It has been applied to photochemistry, high-resolution microscopy, and measurements of molecular distances. Moreover, photons have been studied as elements of quantum computers, and for applications in optical imaging and optical communication such as quantum cryptography.
Nomenclature
The word quanta (singular quantum, Latin for how much) was used before 1900 to mean particles or amounts of different quantities, including electricity. In 1900, the German physicist Max Planck was studying black-body radiation, and he suggested that the experimental observations, specifically at shorter wavelengths, would be explained if the energy was "made up of a completely determinate number of finite equal parts", which he called "energy elements". In 1905, Albert Einstein published a paper in which he proposed that many light-related phenomena—including black-body radiation and the photoelectric effect—would be better explained by modelling electromagnetic waves as consisting of spatially localized, discrete energy quanta. He called these a light quantum (German: ein Lichtquant).
The name photon derives from the Greek word for light, φῶς (transliterated phôs). Arthur Compton used photon in 1928, referring to Gilbert N. Lewis, who coined the term in a letter to Nature on 18 December 1926. The same name was used earlier but was never widely adopted before Lewis: in 1916 by the American physicist and psychologist Leonard T. Troland, in 1921 by the Irish physicist John Joly, in 1924 by the French physiologist René Wurmser (1890–1993), and in 1926 by the French physicist Frithiof Wolfers (1891–1971). The name was suggested initially as a unit related to the illumination of the eye and the resulting sensation of light and was used later in a physiological context. Although Wolfers's and Lewis's theories were contradicted by many experiments and never accepted, the new name was adopted by most physicists very soon after Compton used it.
In physics, a photon is usually denoted by the symbol γ (the Greek letter gamma). This symbol for the photon probably derives from gamma rays, which were discovered in 1900 by Paul Villard, named by Ernest Rutherford in 1903, and shown to be a form of electromagnetic radiation in 1914 by Rutherford and Edward Andrade. In chemistry and optical engineering, photons are usually symbolized by hν, which is the photon energy, where h is the Planck constant and the Greek letter ν (nu) is the photon's frequency.
Physical properties
The photon has no electric charge, is generally considered to have zero rest mass and is a stable particle. The experimental upper limit on the photon mass is very small, on the order of 10−50 kg; its lifetime would be more than 1018 years. For comparison the age of the universe is about 1.38×1010 years.
In a vacuum, a photon has two possible polarization states. The photon is the gauge boson for electromagnetism,: 29–30 and therefore all other quantum numbers of the photon (such as lepton number, baryon number, and flavour quantum numbers) are zero. Also, the photon obeys Bose–Einstein statistics, and not Fermi–Dirac statistics. That is, they do not obey the Pauli exclusion principle: 1221 and more than one can occupy the same bound quantum state.
Photons are emitted in many natural processes. For example, when a charge is accelerated it emits synchrotron radiation. During a molecular, atomic or nuclear transition to a lower energy level, photons of various energy will be emitted, ranging from radio waves to gamma rays. Photons can also be emitted when a particle and its corresponding antiparticle are annihilated (for example, electron–positron annihilation).: 572, 1114, 1172
Relativistic energy and momentum
In empty space, the photon moves at c (the speed of light) and its energy and momentum are related by E = pc, where p is the magnitude of the momentum vector p. This derives from the following relativistic relation, with m = 0:
The energy and momentum of a photon depend only on its frequency () or inversely, its wavelength (λ):
where k is the wave vector, where
- k ≡ |k| = 2π /λ is the wave number, and
- ω ≡ 2 πν is the angular frequency, and
- ħ ≡ h/ 2π is the reduced Planck constant.
Since points in the direction of the photon's propagation, the magnitude of its momentum is
Polarization and spin angular momentum
The photon also carries spin angular momentum, which is related to photon polarization. (Beams of light also exhibit properties described as orbital angular momentum of light).
The angular momentum of the photon has two possible values, either +ħ or −ħ. These two possible values correspond to the two possible pure states of circular polarization. Collections of photons in a light beam may have mixtures of these two values; a linearly polarized light beam will act as if it were composed of equal numbers of the two possible angular momenta.: 325
The spin angular momentum of light does not depend on its frequency, and was experimentally verified by C. V. Raman and S. Bhagavantam in 1931.
Antiparticle annihilation
The collision of a particle with its antiparticle can create photons. In free space at least two photons must be created since, in the center of momentum frame, the colliding antiparticles have no net momentum, whereas a single photon always has momentum (determined by the photon's frequency or wavelength, which cannot be zero). Hence, conservation of momentum (or equivalently, translational invariance) requires that at least two photons are created, with zero net momentum.: 64–65 The energy of the two photons, or, equivalently, their frequency, may be determined from conservation of four-momentum.
Seen another way, the photon can be considered as its own antiparticle (thus an "antiphoton" is simply a normal photon with opposite momentum, equal polarization, and 180° out of phase). The reverse process, pair production, is the dominant mechanism by which high-energy photons such as gamma rays lose energy while passing through matter. That process is the reverse of "annihilation to one photon" allowed in the electric field of an atomic nucleus.
The classical formulae for the energy and momentum of electromagnetic radiation can be re-expressed in terms of photon events. For example, the pressure of electromagnetic radiation on an object derives from the transfer of photon momentum per unit time and unit area to that object, since pressure is force per unit area and force is the change in momentum per unit time.
Experimental checks on photon mass
Current commonly accepted physical theories imply or assume the photon to be strictly massless. If photons were not purely massless, their speeds would vary with frequency, with lower-energy (redder) photons moving slightly slower than higher-energy photons. Relativity would be unaffected by this; the so-called speed of light, c, would then not be the actual speed at which light moves, but a constant of nature which is the upper bound on speed that any object could theoretically attain in spacetime. Thus, it would still be the speed of spacetime ripples (gravitational waves and gravitons), but it would not be the speed of photons.
If a photon did have non-zero mass, there would be other effects as well. Coulomb's law would be modified and the electromagnetic field would have an extra physical degree of freedom. These effects yield more sensitive experimental probes of the photon mass than the frequency dependence of the speed of light. If Coulomb's law is not exactly valid, then that would allow the presence of an electric field to exist within a hollow conductor when it is subjected to an external electric field. This provides a means for precision tests of Coulomb's law. A null result of such an experiment has set a limit of m ≲ 10−14 eV/c2.
Sharper upper limits on the mass of light have been obtained in experiments designed to detect effects caused by the galactic vector potential. Although the galactic vector potential is large because the galactic magnetic field exists on great length scales, only the magnetic field would be observable if the photon is massless. In the case that the photon has mass, the mass term 1/2m2AμAμ would affect the galactic plasma. The fact that no such effects are seen implies an upper bound on the photon mass of m < 3×10−27 eV/c2. The galactic vector potential can also be probed directly by measuring the torque exerted on a magnetized ring. Such methods were used to obtain the sharper upper limit of 1.07×10−27 eV/c2 (the equivalent of 10−36 daltons) given by the Particle Data Group.
These sharp limits from the non-observation of the effects caused by the galactic vector potential have been shown to be model-dependent. If the photon mass is generated via the Higgs mechanism then the upper limit of m ≲ 10−14 eV/c2 from the test of Coulomb's law is valid.
Historical development
In most theories up to the eighteenth century, light was pictured as being made of particles. Since particle models cannot easily account for the refraction, diffraction and birefringence of light, wave theories of light were proposed by René Descartes (1637),Robert Hooke (1665), and Christiaan Huygens (1678); however, particle models remained dominant, chiefly due to the influence of Isaac Newton. In the early 19th century, Thomas Young and August Fresnel clearly demonstrated the interference and diffraction of light, and by 1850 wave models were generally accepted.James Clerk Maxwell's 1865 prediction that light was an electromagnetic wave – which was confirmed experimentally in 1888 by Heinrich Hertz's detection of radio waves – seemed to be the final blow to particle models of light.
The Maxwell wave theory, however, does not account for all properties of light. The Maxwell theory predicts that the energy of a light wave depends only on its intensity, not on its frequency; nevertheless, several independent types of experiments show that the energy imparted by light to atoms depends only on the light's frequency, not on its intensity. For example, some chemical reactions are provoked only by light of frequency higher than a certain threshold; light of frequency lower than the threshold, no matter how intense, does not initiate the reaction. Similarly, electrons can be ejected from a metal plate by shining light of sufficiently high frequency on it (the photoelectric effect); the energy of the ejected electron is related only to the light's frequency, not to its intensity.
At the same time, investigations of black-body radiation carried out over four decades (1860–1900) by various researchers culminated in Max Planck's hypothesis that the energy of any system that absorbs or emits electromagnetic radiation of frequency ν is an integer multiple of an energy quantum E = hν . As shown by Albert Einstein, some form of energy quantization must be assumed to account for the thermal equilibrium observed between matter and electromagnetic radiation; for this explanation of the photoelectric effect, Einstein received the 1921 Nobel Prize in physics.
Since the Maxwell theory of light allows for all possible energies of electromagnetic radiation, most physicists assumed initially that the energy quantization resulted from some unknown constraint on the matter that absorbs or emits the radiation. In 1905, Einstein was the first to propose that energy quantization was a property of electromagnetic radiation itself. Although he accepted the validity of Maxwell's theory, Einstein pointed out that many anomalous experiments could be explained if the energy of a Maxwellian light wave were localized into point-like quanta that move independently of one another, even if the wave itself is spread continuously over space. In 1909 and 1916, Einstein showed that, if Planck's law regarding black-body radiation is accepted, the energy quanta must also carry momentum p = h / λ , making them full-fledged particles. This photon momentum was observed experimentally by Arthur Compton, for which he received the Nobel Prize in 1927. The pivotal question then, was how to unify Maxwell's wave theory of light with its experimentally observed particle nature. The answer to this question occupied Albert Einstein for the rest of his life, and was solved in quantum electrodynamics and its successor, the Standard Model. (See § Quantum field theory and § As a gauge boson, below.)
Einstein's 1905 predictions were verified experimentally in several ways in the first two decades of the 20th century, as recounted in Robert Millikan's Nobel lecture. However, before Compton's experiment showed that photons carried momentum proportional to their wave number (1922),[full citation needed] most physicists were reluctant to believe that electromagnetic radiation itself might be particulate. (See, for example, the Nobel lectures of Wien, Planck and Millikan.) Instead, there was a widespread belief that energy quantization resulted from some unknown constraint on the matter that absorbed or emitted radiation. Attitudes changed over time. In part, the change can be traced to experiments such as those revealing Compton scattering, where it was much more difficult not to ascribe quantization to light itself to explain the observed results.
Even after Compton's experiment, Niels Bohr, Hendrik Kramers and John Slater made one last attempt to preserve the Maxwellian continuous electromagnetic field model of light, the so-called BKS theory. An important feature of the BKS theory is how it treated the conservation of energy and the conservation of momentum. In the BKS theory, energy and momentum are only conserved on the average across many interactions between matter and radiation. However, refined Compton experiments showed that the conservation laws hold for individual interactions. Accordingly, Bohr and his co-workers gave their model "as honorable a funeral as possible". Nevertheless, the failures of the BKS model inspired Werner Heisenberg in his development of matrix mechanics.
A few physicists persisted in developing semiclassical models in which electromagnetic radiation is not quantized, but matter appears to obey the laws of quantum mechanics. Although the evidence from chemical and physical experiments for the existence of photons was overwhelming by the 1970s, this evidence could not be considered as absolutely definitive; since it relied on the interaction of light with matter, and a sufficiently complete theory of matter could in principle account for the evidence. Nevertheless, all semiclassical theories were refuted definitively in the 1970s and 1980s by photon-correlation experiments. Hence, Einstein's hypothesis that quantization is a property of light itself is considered to be proven.
Wave–particle duality and uncertainty principles
Photons obey the laws of quantum mechanics, and so their behavior has both wave-like and particle-like aspects. When a photon is detected by a measuring instrument, it is registered as a single, particulate unit. However, the probability of detecting a photon is calculated by equations that describe waves. This combination of aspects is known as wave–particle duality. For example, the probability distribution for the location at which a photon might be detected displays clearly wave-like phenomena such as diffraction and interference. A single photon passing through a double slit has its energy received at a point on the screen with a probability distribution given by its interference pattern determined by Maxwell's wave equations. However, experiments confirm that the photon is not a short pulse of electromagnetic radiation; a photon's Maxwell waves will diffract, but photon energy does not spread out as it propagates, nor does this energy divide when it encounters a beam splitter. Rather, the received photon acts like a point-like particle since it is absorbed or emitted as a whole by arbitrarily small systems, including systems much smaller than its wavelength, such as an atomic nucleus (≈10−15 m across) or even the point-like electron.
While many introductory texts treat photons using the mathematical techniques of non-relativistic quantum mechanics, this is in some ways an awkward oversimplification, as photons are by nature intrinsically relativistic. Because photons have zero rest mass, no wave function defined for a photon can have all the properties familiar from wave functions in non-relativistic quantum mechanics. In order to avoid these difficulties, physicists employ the second-quantized theory of photons described below, quantum electrodynamics, in which photons are quantized excitations of electromagnetic modes.
Another difficulty is finding the proper analogue for the uncertainty principle, an idea frequently attributed to Heisenberg, who introduced the concept in analyzing a thought experiment involving an electron and a high-energy photon. However, Heisenberg did not give precise mathematical definitions of what the "uncertainty" in these measurements meant. The precise mathematical statement of the position–momentum uncertainty principle is due to Kennard, Pauli, and Weyl. The uncertainty principle applies to situations where an experimenter has a choice of measuring either one of two "canonically conjugate" quantities, like the position and the momentum of a particle. According to the uncertainty principle, no matter how the particle is prepared, it is not possible to make a precise prediction for both of the two alternative measurements: if the outcome of the position measurement is made more certain, the outcome of the momentum measurement becomes less so, and vice versa. A coherent state minimizes the overall uncertainty as far as quantum mechanics allows.Quantum optics makes use of coherent states for modes of the electromagnetic field. There is a tradeoff, reminiscent of the position–momentum uncertainty relation, between measurements of an electromagnetic wave's amplitude and its phase. This is sometimes informally expressed in terms of the uncertainty in the number of photons present in the electromagnetic wave, , and the uncertainty in the phase of the wave, . However, this cannot be an uncertainty relation of the Kennard–Pauli–Weyl type, since unlike position and momentum, the phase cannot be represented by a Hermitian operator.
Bose–Einstein model of a photon gas
In 1924, Satyendra Nath Bose derived Planck's law of black-body radiation without using any electromagnetism, but rather by using a modification of coarse-grained counting of phase space. Einstein showed that this modification is equivalent to assuming that photons are rigorously identical and that it implied a "mysterious non-local interaction", now understood as the requirement for a symmetric quantum mechanical state. This work led to the concept of coherent states and the development of the laser. In the same papers, Einstein extended Bose's formalism to material particles (bosons) and predicted that they would condense into their lowest quantum state at low enough temperatures; this Bose–Einstein condensation was observed experimentally in 1995. It was later used by Lene Hau to slow, and then completely stop, light in 1999 and 2001.
The modern view on this is that photons are, by virtue of their integer spin, bosons (as opposed to fermions with half-integer spin). By the spin-statistics theorem, all bosons obey Bose–Einstein statistics (whereas all fermions obey Fermi–Dirac statistics).
Stimulated and spontaneous emission
In 1916, Albert Einstein showed that Planck's radiation law could be derived from a semi-classical, statistical treatment of photons and atoms, which implies a link between the rates at which atoms emit and absorb photons. The condition follows from the assumption that functions of the emission and absorption of radiation by the atoms are independent of each other, and that thermal equilibrium is made by way of the radiation's interaction with the atoms. Consider a cavity in thermal equilibrium with all parts of itself and filled with electromagnetic radiation and that the atoms can emit and absorb that radiation. Thermal equilibrium requires that the energy density of photons with frequency (which is proportional to their number density) is, on average, constant in time; hence, the rate at which photons of any particular frequency are emitted must equal the rate at which they are absorbed.
Einstein began by postulating simple proportionality relations for the different reaction rates involved. In his model, the rate for a system to absorb a photon of frequency and transition from a lower energy to a higher energy is proportional to the number of atoms with energy and to the energy density of ambient photons of that frequency,
where is the rate constant for absorption. For the reverse process, there are two possibilities: spontaneous emission of a photon, or the emission of a photon initiated by the interaction of the atom with a passing photon and the return of the atom to the lower-energy state. Following Einstein's approach, the corresponding rate for the emission of photons of frequency and transition from a higher energy to a lower energy is
where is the rate constant for emitting a photon spontaneously, and is the rate constant for emissions in response to ambient photons (induced or stimulated emission). In thermodynamic equilibrium, the number of atoms in state and those in state must, on average, be constant; hence, the rates and must be equal. Also, by arguments analogous to the derivation of Boltzmann statistics, the ratio of and is where and are the degeneracy of the state and that of , respectively, and their energies, the Boltzmann constant and the system's temperature. From this, it is readily derived that
and
The and are collectively known as the Einstein coefficients.
Einstein could not fully justify his rate equations, but claimed that it should be possible to calculate the coefficients , and once physicists had obtained "mechanics and electrodynamics modified to accommodate the quantum hypothesis". Not long thereafter, in 1926, Paul Dirac derived the rate constants by using a semiclassical approach, and, in 1927, succeeded in deriving all the rate constants from first principles within the framework of quantum theory. Dirac's work was the foundation of quantum electrodynamics, i.e., the quantization of the electromagnetic field itself. Dirac's approach is also called second quantization or quantum field theory; earlier quantum mechanical treatments only treat material particles as quantum mechanical, not the electromagnetic field.
Einstein was troubled by the fact that his theory seemed incomplete, since it did not determine the direction of a spontaneously emitted photon. A probabilistic nature of light-particle motion was first considered by Newton in his treatment of birefringence and, more generally, of the splitting of light beams at interfaces into a transmitted beam and a reflected beam. Newton hypothesized that hidden variables in the light particle determined which of the two paths a single photon would take. Similarly, Einstein hoped for a more complete theory that would leave nothing to chance, beginning his separation from quantum mechanics. Ironically, Max Born's probabilistic interpretation of the wave function was inspired by Einstein's later work searching for a more complete theory.
Quantum field theory
Quantization of the electromagnetic field
In 1910, Peter Debye derived Planck's law of black-body radiation from a relatively simple assumption. He decomposed the electromagnetic field in a cavity into its Fourier modes, and assumed that the energy in any mode was an integer multiple of , where is the frequency of the electromagnetic mode. Planck's law of black-body radiation follows immediately as a geometric sum. However, Debye's approach failed to give the correct formula for the energy fluctuations of black-body radiation, which were derived by Einstein in 1909.
In 1925, Born, Heisenberg and Jordan reinterpreted Debye's concept in a key way. As may be shown classically, the Fourier modes of the electromagnetic field—a complete set of electromagnetic plane waves indexed by their wave vector k and polarization state—are equivalent to a set of uncoupled simple harmonic oscillators. Treated quantum mechanically, the energy levels of such oscillators are known to be , where is the oscillator frequency. The key new step was to identify an electromagnetic mode with energy as a state with photons, each of energy . This approach gives the correct energy fluctuation formula.
Dirac took this one step further. He treated the interaction between a charge and an electromagnetic field as a small perturbation that induces transitions in the photon states, changing the numbers of photons in the modes, while conserving energy and momentum overall. Dirac was able to derive Einstein's and coefficients from first principles, and showed that the Bose–Einstein statistics of photons is a natural consequence of quantizing the electromagnetic field correctly (Bose's reasoning went in the opposite direction; he derived Planck's law of black-body radiation by assuming B–E statistics). In Dirac's time, it was not yet known that all bosons, including photons, must obey Bose–Einstein statistics.
Dirac's second-order perturbation theory can involve virtual photons, transient intermediate states of the electromagnetic field; the static electric and magnetic interactions are mediated by such virtual photons. In such quantum field theories, the probability amplitude of observable events is calculated by summing over all possible intermediate steps, even ones that are unphysical; hence, virtual photons are not constrained to satisfy , and may have extra polarization states; depending on the gauge used, virtual photons may have three or four polarization states, instead of the two states of real photons. Although these transient virtual photons can never be observed, they contribute measurably to the probabilities of observable events.
Indeed, such second-order and higher-order perturbation calculations can give apparently infinite contributions to the sum. Such unphysical results are corrected for using the technique of renormalization.
Other virtual particles may contribute to the summation as well; for example, two photons may interact indirectly through virtual electron–positron pairs. Such photon–photon scattering (see two-photon physics), as well as electron–photon scattering, is meant to be one of the modes of operations of the planned particle accelerator, the International Linear Collider.
In modern physics notation, the quantum state of the electromagnetic field is written as a Fock state, a tensor product of the states for each electromagnetic mode
where represents the state in which photons are in the mode . In this notation, the creation of a new photon in mode (e.g., emitted from an atomic transition) is written as . This notation merely expresses the concept of Born, Heisenberg and Jordan described above, and does not add any physics.
As a gauge boson
The electromagnetic field can be understood as a gauge field, i.e., as a field that results from requiring that a gauge symmetry holds independently at every position in spacetime. For the electromagnetic field, this gauge symmetry is the Abelian U(1) symmetry of complex numbers of absolute value 1, which reflects the ability to vary the phase of a complex field without affecting observables or real valued functions made from it, such as the energy or the Lagrangian.
The quanta of an Abelian gauge field must be massless, uncharged bosons, as long as the symmetry is not broken; hence, the photon is predicted to be massless, and to have zero electric charge and integer spin. The particular form of the electromagnetic interaction specifies that the photon must have spin ±1; thus, its helicity must be . These two spin components correspond to the classical concepts of right-handed and left-handed circularly polarized light. However, the transient virtual photons of quantum electrodynamics may also adopt unphysical polarization states.
In the prevailing Standard Model of physics, the photon is one of four gauge bosons in the electroweak interaction; the other three are denoted W+, W− and Z0 and are responsible for the weak interaction. Unlike the photon, these gauge bosons have mass, owing to a mechanism that breaks their SU(2) gauge symmetry. The unification of the photon with W and Z gauge bosons in the electroweak interaction was accomplished by Sheldon Glashow, Abdus Salam and Steven Weinberg, for which they were awarded the 1979 Nobel Prize in physics. Physicists continue to hypothesize grand unified theories that connect these four gauge bosons with the eight gluon gauge bosons of quantum chromodynamics; however, key predictions of these theories, such as proton decay, have not been observed experimentally.
Hadronic properties
Measurements of the interaction between energetic photons and hadrons show that the interaction is much more intense than expected by the interaction of merely photons with the hadron's electric charge. Furthermore, the interaction of energetic photons with protons is similar to the interaction of photons with neutrons in spite of the fact that the electrical charge structures of protons and neutrons are substantially different. A theory called Vector Meson Dominance (VMD) was developed to explain this effect. According to VMD, the photon is a superposition of the pure electromagnetic photon, which interacts only with electric charges, and vector mesons, which mediate the residual nuclear force. However, if experimentally probed at very short distances, the intrinsic structure of the photon appears to have as components a charge-neutral flux of quarks and gluons, quasi-free according to asymptotic freedom in QCD. That flux is described by the photon structure function. A review by Nisius (2000) presented a comprehensive comparison of data with theoretical predictions.
Contributions to the mass of a system
The energy of a system that emits a photon is decreased by the energy of the photon as measured in the rest frame of the emitting system, which may result in a reduction in mass in the amount . Similarly, the mass of a system that absorbs a photon is increased by a corresponding amount. As an application, the energy balance of nuclear reactions involving photons is commonly written in terms of the masses of the nuclei involved, and terms of the form for the gamma photons (and for other relevant energies, such as the recoil energy of nuclei).
This concept is applied in key predictions of quantum electrodynamics (QED, see above). In that theory, the mass of electrons (or, more generally, leptons) is modified by including the mass contributions of virtual photons, in a technique known as renormalization. Such "radiative corrections" contribute to a number of predictions of QED, such as the magnetic dipole moment of leptons, the Lamb shift, and the hyperfine structure of bound lepton pairs, such as muonium and positronium.
Since photons contribute to the stress–energy tensor, they exert a gravitational attraction on other objects, according to the theory of general relativity. Conversely, photons are themselves affected by gravity; their normally straight trajectories may be bent by warped spacetime, as in gravitational lensing, and their frequencies may be lowered by moving to a higher gravitational potential, as in the Pound–Rebka experiment. However, these effects are not specific to photons; exactly the same effects would be predicted for classical electromagnetic waves.
In matter
Light that travels through transparent matter does so at a lower speed than c, the speed of light in vacuum. The factor by which the speed is decreased is called the refractive index of the material. In a classical wave picture, the slowing can be explained by the light inducing electric polarization in the matter, the polarized matter radiating new light, and that new light interfering with the original light wave to form a delayed wave. In a particle picture, the slowing can instead be described as a blending of the photon with quantum excitations of the matter to produce quasi-particles known as polaritons. Polaritons have a nonzero effective mass, which means that they cannot travel at c. Light of different frequencies may travel through matter at different speeds; this is called dispersion (not to be confused with scattering). In some cases, it can result in extremely slow speeds of light in matter. The effects of photon interactions with other quasi-particles may be observed directly in Raman scattering and Brillouin scattering.
Photons can be scattered by matter. For example, photons scatter so many times in the solar radiative zone after leaving the core of the Sun that radiant energy takes about a million years to reach the convection zone. However, photons emitted from the sun's photosphere take only 8.3 minutes to reach Earth.
Photons can also be absorbed by nuclei, atoms or molecules, provoking transitions between their energy levels. A classic example is the molecular transition of retinal (C20H28O), which is responsible for vision, as discovered in 1958 by Nobel laureate biochemist George Wald and co-workers. The absorption provokes a cis–trans isomerization that, in combination with other such transitions, is transduced into nerve impulses. The absorption of photons can even break chemical bonds, as in the photodissociation of chlorine; this is the subject of photochemistry.
Technological applications
Photons have many applications in technology. These examples are chosen to illustrate applications of photons per se, rather than general optical devices such as lenses, etc. that could operate under a classical theory of light. The laser is an important application and is discussed above under stimulated emission.
Individual photons can be detected by several methods. The classic photomultiplier tube exploits the photoelectric effect: a photon of sufficient energy strikes a metal plate and knocks free an electron, initiating an ever-amplifying avalanche of electrons. Semiconductor charge-coupled device chips use a similar effect: an incident photon generates a charge on a microscopic capacitor that can be detected. Other detectors such as Geiger counters use the ability of photons to ionize gas molecules contained in the device, causing a detectable change of conductivity of the gas.
Planck's energy formula is often used by engineers and chemists in design, both to compute the change in energy resulting from a photon absorption and to determine the frequency of the light emitted from a given photon emission. For example, the emission spectrum of a gas-discharge lamp can be altered by filling it with (mixtures of) gases with different electronic energy level configurations.
Under some conditions, an energy transition can be excited by "two" photons that individually would be insufficient. This allows for higher resolution microscopy, because the sample absorbs energy only in the spectrum where two beams of different colors overlap significantly, which can be made much smaller than the excitation volume of a single beam (see two-photon excitation microscopy). Moreover, these photons cause less damage to the sample, since they are of lower energy.
In some cases, two energy transitions can be coupled so that, as one system absorbs a photon, another nearby system "steals" its energy and re-emits a photon of a different frequency. This is the basis of fluorescence resonance energy transfer, a technique that is used in molecular biology to study the interaction of suitable proteins.
Several different kinds of hardware random number generators involve the detection of single photons. In one example, for each bit in the random sequence that is to be produced, a photon is sent to a beam-splitter. In such a situation, there are two possible outcomes of equal probability. The actual outcome is used to determine whether the next bit in the sequence is "0" or "1".
Quantum optics and computation
Much research has been devoted to applications of photons in the field of quantum optics. Photons seem well-suited to be elements of an extremely fast quantum computer, and the quantum entanglement of photons is a focus of research. Nonlinear optical processes are another active research area, with topics such as two-photon absorption, self-phase modulation, modulational instability and optical parametric oscillators. However, such processes generally do not require the assumption of photons per se; they may often be modeled by treating atoms as nonlinear oscillators. The nonlinear process of spontaneous parametric down conversion is often used to produce single-photon states. Finally, photons are essential in some aspects of optical communication, especially for quantum cryptography.
Two-photon physics studies interactions between photons, which are rare. In 2018, Massachusetts Institute of Technology researchers announced the discovery of bound photon triplets, which may involve polaritons.
See also
- Advanced Photon Source at Argonne National Laboratory
- Ballistic photon
- Dirac equation
- Doppler effect
- EPR paradox
- High energy X-ray imaging technology
- Luminiferous aether
- Medipix
- Phonon
- Photography
- Photon counting
- Photon epoch
- Photonic molecule
- Photonics
- Single-photon source
- Static forces and virtual-particle exchange
- Variable speed of light
Notes
- Although the 1967 Elsevier translation of Planck's Nobel Lecture interprets Planck's Lichtquant as "photon", the more literal 1922 translation by Hans Thacher Clarke and Ludwik Silberstein Planck, Max (1922). "via Google Books". The Origin and Development of the Quantum Theory. Clarendon Press – via Internet Archive (archive.org, 2007-03-01). uses "light-quantum". No evidence is known that Planck himself had used the term "photon" as of 1926 (see also).
- Asimov credits Arthur Compton with defining quanta of energy as photons in 1923.
- However, it is possible if the system interacts with a third particle or field for the annihilation to produce one photon, since the third particle or field can absorb momentum equal and opposite to the single photon, providing dynamic balance. An example is when a positron annihilates with a bound atomic electron; in that case, it is possible for only one photon to be emitted, as the nuclear Coulomb field breaks translational symmetry.
- The phrase "no matter how intense" refers to intensities below approximately 1013 W/cm2 at which point perturbation theory begins to break down. In contrast, in the intense regime, which for visible light is above approximately 1014 W/cm2, the classical wave description correctly predicts the energy acquired by electrons, called ponderomotive energy. By comparison, sunlight is only about 0.1 W/cm2.
- These experiments produce results that cannot be explained by any classical theory of light, since they involve anticorrelations that result from the quantum measurement process. In 1974, the first such experiment was carried out by Clauser, who reported a violation of a classical Cauchy–Schwarz inequality. In 1977, Kimble et al. demonstrated an analogous anti-bunching effect of photons interacting with a beam splitter; this approach was simplified and sources of error eliminated in the photon-anticorrelation experiment of Grangier, Roger, & Aspect (1986); This work is reviewed and simplified further in Thorn, Neel, et al. (2004).
- The issue was first formulated by Theodore Duddell Newton and Eugene Wigner. The challenges arise from the fundamental nature of the Lorentz group, which describes the symmetries of spacetime in special relativity. Unlike the generators of Galilean transformations, the generators of Lorentz boosts do not commute, and so simultaneously assigning low uncertainties to all coordinates of a relativistic particle's position becomes problematic.
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{{cite book}}
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- Steven Weinberg Nobel lecture Archived 2008-04-18 at the Wayback Machine, delivered 8 December 1979.
- E.g., chapter 14 in Hughes, I.S. (1985). Elementary particles (2nd ed.). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-26092-3.
- Bauer, T.H.; Spital, R.D.; Yennie, D. R.; Pipkin, F.M. (1978). "The hadronic properties of the photon in high-energy interactions". Reviews of Modern Physics. 50 (2): 261. Bibcode:1978RvMP...50..261B. doi:10.1103/RevModPhys.50.261.
- Sakurai, J.J. (1960). "Theory of strong interactions". Annals of Physics. 11 (1): 1–48. Bibcode:1960AnPhy..11....1S. doi:10.1016/0003-4916(60)90126-3.
- Walsh, T.F.; Zerwas, P. (1973). "Two-photon processes in the parton model". Physics Letters B. 44 (2): 195. Bibcode:1973PhLB...44..195W. doi:10.1016/0370-2693(73)90520-0.
- Witten, E. (1977). "Anomalous cross section for photon–photon scattering in gauge theories". Nuclear Physics B. 120 (2): 189–202. Bibcode:1977NuPhB.120..189W. doi:10.1016/0550-3213(77)90038-4.
- Nisius, R. (2000). "The photon structure from deep inelastic electron–photon scattering". Physics Reports. 332 (4–6): 165–317. arXiv:hep-ex/9912049. Bibcode:2000PhR...332..165N. doi:10.1016/S0370-1573(99)00115-5. S2CID 119437227.
- E.g., section 10.1 in Dunlap, R. A. (2004). An Introduction to the Physics of Nuclei and Particles. Brooks/Cole. ISBN 978-0-534-39294-9.
- Radiative correction to electron mass section 7–1–2, anomalous magnetic moments section 7–2–1, Lamb shift section 7–3–2 and hyperfine splitting in positronium section 10–3 in Itzykson, C.; Zuber, J.-B. (1980). Quantum Field Theory. McGraw-Hill. ISBN 978-0-07-032071-0.
- E.g. sections 9.1 (gravitational contribution of photons) and 10.5 (influence of gravity on light) in Stephani, H.; Stewart, J. (1990). General Relativity: An Introduction to the Theory of Gravitational Field. Cambridge University Press. pp. 86 ff, 108 ff. ISBN 978-0-521-37941-0.
- Polaritons section 10.10.1, Raman and Brillouin scattering section 10.11.3 in Patterson, J. D.; Bailey, B. C. (2007). Solid-State Physics: Introduction to the Theory. Springer. ISBN 978-3-540-24115-7.
- "The Solar Interior". Marshall Space Flight Center: Solar Physics. National Aeronautics and Space Commission. Retrieved 4 December 2024.
- Koupelis, Theo; Kuhn, Karl F. (2007). In Quest of the Universe. Jones and Bartlett Canada. p. 102. ISBN 9780763743871. Archived from the original on 2024-05-12. Retrieved 2020-11-29.
- E.g. section 11-5 C in Pine, S. H.; Hendrickson, J. B.; Cram, D. J.; Hammond, G. S. (1980). Organic Chemistry (4th ed.). McGraw-Hill. ISBN 978-0-07-050115-7.
- Nobel lecture given by G. Wald on December 12, 1967, online at nobelprize.org: The Molecular Basis of Visual Excitation Archived 2016-04-23 at the Wayback Machine.
- Photomultiplier section 1.1.10, CCDs section 1.1.8, Geiger counters section 1.3.2.1 in Kitchin, C. R. (2008). Astrophysical Techniques. Boca Raton, Florida: CRC Press. ISBN 978-1-4200-8243-2.
- Waymouth, John (1971). Electric Discharge Lamps. Cambridge, Massachusetts: The M.I.T. Press. ISBN 978-0-262-23048-3.
- Denk, W.; Svoboda, K. (1997). "Photon upmanship: Why multiphoton imaging is more than a gimmick". Neuron. 18 (3): 351–357. doi:10.1016/S0896-6273(00)81237-4. PMID 9115730. S2CID 2414593.
- Lakowicz, J. R. (2006). Principles of Fluorescence Spectroscopy. Springer. pp. 529 ff. ISBN 978-0-387-31278-1.
- Jennewein, T.; Achleitner, U.; Weihs, G.; Weinfurter, H.; Zeilinger, A. (2000). "A fast and compact quantum random number generator". Review of Scientific Instruments. 71 (4): 1675–1680. arXiv:quant-ph/9912118. Bibcode:2000RScI...71.1675J. doi:10.1063/1.1150518. S2CID 13118587.
- Stefanov, A.; Gisin, N.; Guinnard, O.; Guinnard, L.; Zbiden, H. (2000). "Optical quantum random number generator". Journal of Modern Optics. 47 (4): 595–598. doi:10.1080/095003400147908.
- Introductory-level material on the various sub-fields of quantum optics can be found in Fox, M. (2006). Quantum Optics: An introduction. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-856673-1 – via Google Books.
- Hignett, Katherine (16 February 2018). "Physics creates new form of light that could drive the quantum computing revolution". Newsweek. Archived from the original on 25 April 2021. Retrieved 17 February 2018.
- Liang, Qi-Yu; et al. (16 February 2018). "Observation of three-photon bound states in a quantum nonlinear medium". Science. 359 (6377): 783–786. arXiv:1709.01478. Bibcode:2018Sci...359..783L. doi:10.1126/science.aao7293. PMC 6467536. PMID 29449489.
Further reading
- By date of publication
- Alonso, M.; Finn, E. J. (1968). Fundamental University Physics. Vol. III: Quantum and Statistical Physics. Addison-Wesley. ISBN 978-0-201-00262-1.
- Clauser, J. F. (1974). "Experimental distinction between the quantum and classical field-theoretic predictions for the photoelectric effect". Physical Review D. 9 (4): 853–860. Bibcode:1974PhRvD...9..853C. doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.9.853. S2CID 118320287. Archived from the original on 2019-01-24. Retrieved 2019-01-03.
- Pais, Abraham (1982). Subtle is the Lord: The Science and the Life of Albert Einstein. Oxford University Press.
- Feynman, Richard (1985). QED: The Strange Theory of Light and Matter. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-12575-6.
- Grangier, P.; Roger, G.; Aspect, A. (1986). "Experimental evidence for a photon anticorrelation effect on a beam splitter: A new light on single-photon interferences". Europhysics Letters. 1 (4): 173–179. Bibcode:1986EL......1..173G. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.178.4356. doi:10.1209/0295-5075/1/4/004. S2CID 250837011.
- Lamb, Willis E. (1995). "Anti-photon". Applied Physics B. 60 (2–3): 77–84. Bibcode:1995ApPhB..60...77L. doi:10.1007/BF01135846. S2CID 263785760.
- "Special supplemental issue" (PDF). Optics and Photonics News. Vol. 14. October 2003. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 5, 2022.
- Roychoudhuri, C.; Rajarshi, R. (2003). "The nature of light: What is a photon?". Optics and Photonics News. Vol. 14. pp. S1 (Supplement).
- Zajonc, A. (2003). "Light reconsidered". Optics and Photonics News. Vol. 14. pp. S2–S5 (Supplement).
- Loudon, R. (2003). "What is a photon?". Optics and Photonics News. Vol. 14. pp. S6–S11 (Supplement).
- Finkelstein, D. (2003). "What is a photon?". Optics and Photonics News. Vol. 14. pp. S12–S17 (Supplement).
- Muthukrishnan, A.; Scully, M. O.; Zubairy, M. S. (2003). "The concept of the photon – revisited". Optics and Photonics News. Vol. 14. pp. S18–S27 (Supplement).
- Mack, H.; Schleich, Wolfgang P. (2003). "A photon viewed from Wigner phase space". Optics and Photonics News. Vol. 14. pp. S28–S35 (Supplement).
- Glauber, R. (2005). "One Hundred Years of Light Quanta" (PDF). Nobel Prize. Physics Lecture. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-07-23. Retrieved 2009-06-29.
- Hentschel, K. (2007). "Light quanta: The maturing of a concept by the stepwise accretion of meaning". Physics and Philosophy. 1 (2): 1–20. Archived from the original on 2014-05-29. Retrieved 2014-06-29.
- Education with single photons
- Thorn, J. J.; Neel, M. S.; Donato, V. W.; Bergreen, G. S.; Davies, R. E.; Beck, M. (2004). "Observing the quantum behavior of light in an undergraduate laboratory" (PDF). American Journal of Physics. 72 (9): 1210–1219. Bibcode:2004AmJPh..72.1210T. doi:10.1119/1.1737397. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2016-02-01. Retrieved 2009-06-29.
- Bronner, P.; Strunz, Andreas; Silberhorn, Christine; Meyn, Jan-Peter (2009). "Interactive screen experiments with single photons". European Journal of Physics. 30 (2): 345–353. Bibcode:2009EJPh...30..345B. doi:10.1088/0143-0807/30/2/014. S2CID 38626417. Archived from the original on 2019-07-01. Retrieved 2009-07-17.
External links
- Quotations related to Photon at Wikiquote
- The dictionary definition of photon at Wiktionary
- Media related to Photon at Wikimedia Commons
A photon from Ancient Greek fῶs fwtos phos phōtos light is an elementary particle that is a quantum of the electromagnetic field including electromagnetic radiation such as light and radio waves and the force carrier for the electromagnetic force Photons are massless particles that can move no faster than the speed of light measured in vacuum The photon belongs to the class of boson particles PhotonCompositionElementary particleStatisticsBosonicFamilyGauge bosonInteractionsElectromagnetic weak and gravity SymbolgTheorizedAlbert Einstein 1905 The name photon is generally attributed to Gilbert N Lewis 1926 Mass0 theoretical value lt 1 10 18 eV c2 experimental limit Mean lifetimeStableElectric charge0 lt 1 10 35 eColor chargeNoSpin1 ħSpin states 1 ħ 1 ħParity 1C parity 1CondensedI JP C 0 1 1 As with other elementary particles photons are best explained by quantum mechanics and exhibit wave particle duality their behavior featuring properties of both waves and particles The modern photon concept originated during the first two decades of the 20th century with the work of Albert Einstein who built upon the research of Max Planck While Planck was trying to explain how matter and electromagnetic radiation could be in thermal equilibrium with one another he proposed that the energy stored within a material object should be regarded as composed of an integer number of discrete equal sized parts To explain the photoelectric effect Einstein introduced the idea that light itself is made of discrete units of energy In 1926 Gilbert N Lewis popularized the term photon for these energy units Subsequently many other experiments validated Einstein s approach In the Standard Model of particle physics photons and other elementary particles are described as a necessary consequence of physical laws having a certain symmetry at every point in spacetime The intrinsic properties of particles such as charge mass and spin are determined by gauge symmetry The photon concept has led to momentous advances in experimental and theoretical physics including lasers Bose Einstein condensation quantum field theory and the probabilistic interpretation of quantum mechanics It has been applied to photochemistry high resolution microscopy and measurements of molecular distances Moreover photons have been studied as elements of quantum computers and for applications in optical imaging and optical communication such as quantum cryptography NomenclaturePhotoelectric effect the emission of electrons from a metal plate caused by light quanta photons1926 Gilbert N Lewis letter which brought the word photon into common usage The word quanta singular quantum Latin for how much was used before 1900 to mean particles or amounts of different quantities including electricity In 1900 the German physicist Max Planck was studying black body radiation and he suggested that the experimental observations specifically at shorter wavelengths would be explained if the energy was made up of a completely determinate number of finite equal parts which he called energy elements In 1905 Albert Einstein published a paper in which he proposed that many light related phenomena including black body radiation and the photoelectric effect would be better explained by modelling electromagnetic waves as consisting of spatially localized discrete energy quanta He called these a light quantum German ein Lichtquant The name photon derives from the Greek word for light fῶs transliterated phos Arthur Compton used photon in 1928 referring to Gilbert N Lewis who coined the term in a letter to Nature on 18 December 1926 The same name was used earlier but was never widely adopted before Lewis in 1916 by the American physicist and psychologist Leonard T Troland in 1921 by the Irish physicist John Joly in 1924 by the French physiologist Rene Wurmser 1890 1993 and in 1926 by the French physicist Frithiof Wolfers 1891 1971 The name was suggested initially as a unit related to the illumination of the eye and the resulting sensation of light and was used later in a physiological context Although Wolfers s and Lewis s theories were contradicted by many experiments and never accepted the new name was adopted by most physicists very soon after Compton used it In physics a photon is usually denoted by the symbol g the Greek letter gamma This symbol for the photon probably derives from gamma rays which were discovered in 1900 by Paul Villard named by Ernest Rutherford in 1903 and shown to be a form of electromagnetic radiation in 1914 by Rutherford and Edward Andrade In chemistry and optical engineering photons are usually symbolized by hn which is the photon energy where h is the Planck constant and the Greek letter n nu is the photon s frequency Physical propertiesThe photon has no electric charge is generally considered to have zero rest mass and is a stable particle The experimental upper limit on the photon mass is very small on the order of 10 50 kg its lifetime would be more than 1018 years For comparison the age of the universe is about 1 38 1010 years In a vacuum a photon has two possible polarization states The photon is the gauge boson for electromagnetism 29 30 and therefore all other quantum numbers of the photon such as lepton number baryon number and flavour quantum numbers are zero Also the photon obeys Bose Einstein statistics and not Fermi Dirac statistics That is they do not obey the Pauli exclusion principle 1221 and more than one can occupy the same bound quantum state Photons are emitted in many natural processes For example when a charge is accelerated it emits synchrotron radiation During a molecular atomic or nuclear transition to a lower energy level photons of various energy will be emitted ranging from radio waves to gamma rays Photons can also be emitted when a particle and its corresponding antiparticle are annihilated for example electron positron annihilation 572 1114 1172 Relativistic energy and momentum The cone shows possible values of wave 4 vector of a photon The time axis gives the angular frequency rad s 1 and the space axis represents the angular wavenumber rad m 1 Green and indigo represent left and right polarization In empty space the photon moves at c the speed of light and its energy and momentum are related by E pc where p is the magnitude of the momentum vector p This derives from the following relativistic relation with m 0 E2 p2c2 m2c4 displaystyle E 2 p 2 c 2 m 2 c 4 The energy and momentum of a photon depend only on its frequency n displaystyle nu or inversely its wavelength l E ℏw hn hcl displaystyle E hbar omega h nu frac h c lambda p ℏk displaystyle boldsymbol p hbar boldsymbol k where k is the wave vector where k k 2p l is the wave number and w 2 pn is the angular frequency and ħ h 2p is the reduced Planck constant Since p displaystyle boldsymbol p points in the direction of the photon s propagation the magnitude of its momentum is p p ℏk hnc hl displaystyle p equiv left boldsymbol p right hbar k frac h nu c frac h lambda Polarization and spin angular momentum The photon also carries spin angular momentum which is related to photon polarization Beams of light also exhibit properties described as orbital angular momentum of light The angular momentum of the photon has two possible values either ħ or ħ These two possible values correspond to the two possible pure states of circular polarization Collections of photons in a light beam may have mixtures of these two values a linearly polarized light beam will act as if it were composed of equal numbers of the two possible angular momenta 325 The spin angular momentum of light does not depend on its frequency and was experimentally verified by C V Raman and S Bhagavantam in 1931 Antiparticle annihilation The collision of a particle with its antiparticle can create photons In free space at least two photons must be created since in the center of momentum frame the colliding antiparticles have no net momentum whereas a single photon always has momentum determined by the photon s frequency or wavelength which cannot be zero Hence conservation of momentum or equivalently translational invariance requires that at least two photons are created with zero net momentum 64 65 The energy of the two photons or equivalently their frequency may be determined from conservation of four momentum Seen another way the photon can be considered as its own antiparticle thus an antiphoton is simply a normal photon with opposite momentum equal polarization and 180 out of phase The reverse process pair production is the dominant mechanism by which high energy photons such as gamma rays lose energy while passing through matter That process is the reverse of annihilation to one photon allowed in the electric field of an atomic nucleus The classical formulae for the energy and momentum of electromagnetic radiation can be re expressed in terms of photon events For example the pressure of electromagnetic radiation on an object derives from the transfer of photon momentum per unit time and unit area to that object since pressure is force per unit area and force is the change in momentum per unit time Experimental checks on photon mass Current commonly accepted physical theories imply or assume the photon to be strictly massless If photons were not purely massless their speeds would vary with frequency with lower energy redder photons moving slightly slower than higher energy photons Relativity would be unaffected by this the so called speed of light c would then not be the actual speed at which light moves but a constant of nature which is the upper bound on speed that any object could theoretically attain in spacetime Thus it would still be the speed of spacetime ripples gravitational waves and gravitons but it would not be the speed of photons If a photon did have non zero mass there would be other effects as well Coulomb s law would be modified and the electromagnetic field would have an extra physical degree of freedom These effects yield more sensitive experimental probes of the photon mass than the frequency dependence of the speed of light If Coulomb s law is not exactly valid then that would allow the presence of an electric field to exist within a hollow conductor when it is subjected to an external electric field This provides a means for precision tests of Coulomb s law A null result of such an experiment has set a limit of m 10 14 eV c2 Sharper upper limits on the mass of light have been obtained in experiments designed to detect effects caused by the galactic vector potential Although the galactic vector potential is large because the galactic magnetic field exists on great length scales only the magnetic field would be observable if the photon is massless In the case that the photon has mass the mass term 1 2 m2AmAm would affect the galactic plasma The fact that no such effects are seen implies an upper bound on the photon mass of m lt 3 10 27 eV c2 The galactic vector potential can also be probed directly by measuring the torque exerted on a magnetized ring Such methods were used to obtain the sharper upper limit of 1 07 10 27 eV c2 the equivalent of 10 36 daltons given by the Particle Data Group These sharp limits from the non observation of the effects caused by the galactic vector potential have been shown to be model dependent If the photon mass is generated via the Higgs mechanism then the upper limit of m 10 14 eV c2 from the test of Coulomb s law is valid Historical developmentThomas Young s double slit experiment in 1801 showed that light can act as a wave helping to invalidate early particle theories of light 964 In most theories up to the eighteenth century light was pictured as being made of particles Since particle models cannot easily account for the refraction diffraction and birefringence of light wave theories of light were proposed by Rene Descartes 1637 Robert Hooke 1665 and Christiaan Huygens 1678 however particle models remained dominant chiefly due to the influence of Isaac Newton In the early 19th century Thomas Young and August Fresnel clearly demonstrated the interference and diffraction of light and by 1850 wave models were generally accepted James Clerk Maxwell s 1865 prediction that light was an electromagnetic wave which was confirmed experimentally in 1888 by Heinrich Hertz s detection of radio waves seemed to be the final blow to particle models of light In 1900 Maxwell s theoretical model of light as oscillating electric and magnetic fields seemed complete However several observations could not be explained by any wave model of electromagnetic radiation leading to the idea that light energy was packaged into quanta described by E hn Later experiments showed that these light quanta also carry momentum and thus can be considered particles The photon concept was born leading to a deeper understanding of the electric and magnetic fields themselves The Maxwell wave theory however does not account for all properties of light The Maxwell theory predicts that the energy of a light wave depends only on its intensity not on its frequency nevertheless several independent types of experiments show that the energy imparted by light to atoms depends only on the light s frequency not on its intensity For example some chemical reactions are provoked only by light of frequency higher than a certain threshold light of frequency lower than the threshold no matter how intense does not initiate the reaction Similarly electrons can be ejected from a metal plate by shining light of sufficiently high frequency on it the photoelectric effect the energy of the ejected electron is related only to the light s frequency not to its intensity At the same time investigations of black body radiation carried out over four decades 1860 1900 by various researchers culminated in Max Planck s hypothesis that the energy of any system that absorbs or emits electromagnetic radiation of frequency n is an integer multiple of an energy quantum E hn As shown by Albert Einstein some form of energy quantization must be assumed to account for the thermal equilibrium observed between matter and electromagnetic radiation for this explanation of the photoelectric effect Einstein received the 1921 Nobel Prize in physics Since the Maxwell theory of light allows for all possible energies of electromagnetic radiation most physicists assumed initially that the energy quantization resulted from some unknown constraint on the matter that absorbs or emits the radiation In 1905 Einstein was the first to propose that energy quantization was a property of electromagnetic radiation itself Although he accepted the validity of Maxwell s theory Einstein pointed out that many anomalous experiments could be explained if the energy of a Maxwellian light wave were localized into point like quanta that move independently of one another even if the wave itself is spread continuously over space In 1909 and 1916 Einstein showed that if Planck s law regarding black body radiation is accepted the energy quanta must also carry momentum p h l making them full fledged particles This photon momentum was observed experimentally by Arthur Compton for which he received the Nobel Prize in 1927 The pivotal question then was how to unify Maxwell s wave theory of light with its experimentally observed particle nature The answer to this question occupied Albert Einstein for the rest of his life and was solved in quantum electrodynamics and its successor the Standard Model See Quantum field theory and As a gauge boson below Up to 1923 most physicists were reluctant to accept that light itself was quantized Instead they tried to explain photon behaviour by quantizing only matter as in the Bohr model of the hydrogen atom shown here Even though these semiclassical models were only a first approximation they were accurate for simple systems and they led to quantum mechanics Einstein s 1905 predictions were verified experimentally in several ways in the first two decades of the 20th century as recounted in Robert Millikan s Nobel lecture However before Compton s experiment showed that photons carried momentum proportional to their wave number 1922 full citation needed most physicists were reluctant to believe that electromagnetic radiation itself might be particulate See for example the Nobel lectures of Wien Planck and Millikan Instead there was a widespread belief that energy quantization resulted from some unknown constraint on the matter that absorbed or emitted radiation Attitudes changed over time In part the change can be traced to experiments such as those revealing Compton scattering where it was much more difficult not to ascribe quantization to light itself to explain the observed results Even after Compton s experiment Niels Bohr Hendrik Kramers and John Slater made one last attempt to preserve the Maxwellian continuous electromagnetic field model of light the so called BKS theory An important feature of the BKS theory is how it treated the conservation of energy and the conservation of momentum In the BKS theory energy and momentum are only conserved on the average across many interactions between matter and radiation However refined Compton experiments showed that the conservation laws hold for individual interactions Accordingly Bohr and his co workers gave their model as honorable a funeral as possible Nevertheless the failures of the BKS model inspired Werner Heisenberg in his development of matrix mechanics A few physicists persisted in developing semiclassical models in which electromagnetic radiation is not quantized but matter appears to obey the laws of quantum mechanics Although the evidence from chemical and physical experiments for the existence of photons was overwhelming by the 1970s this evidence could not be considered as absolutely definitive since it relied on the interaction of light with matter and a sufficiently complete theory of matter could in principle account for the evidence Nevertheless all semiclassical theories were refuted definitively in the 1970s and 1980s by photon correlation experiments Hence Einstein s hypothesis that quantization is a property of light itself is considered to be proven Wave particle duality and uncertainty principlesPhotons obey the laws of quantum mechanics and so their behavior has both wave like and particle like aspects When a photon is detected by a measuring instrument it is registered as a single particulate unit However the probability of detecting a photon is calculated by equations that describe waves This combination of aspects is known as wave particle duality For example the probability distribution for the location at which a photon might be detected displays clearly wave like phenomena such as diffraction and interference A single photon passing through a double slit has its energy received at a point on the screen with a probability distribution given by its interference pattern determined by Maxwell s wave equations However experiments confirm that the photon is not a short pulse of electromagnetic radiation a photon s Maxwell waves will diffract but photon energy does not spread out as it propagates nor does this energy divide when it encounters a beam splitter Rather the received photon acts like a point like particle since it is absorbed or emitted as a whole by arbitrarily small systems including systems much smaller than its wavelength such as an atomic nucleus 10 15 m across or even the point like electron While many introductory texts treat photons using the mathematical techniques of non relativistic quantum mechanics this is in some ways an awkward oversimplification as photons are by nature intrinsically relativistic Because photons have zero rest mass no wave function defined for a photon can have all the properties familiar from wave functions in non relativistic quantum mechanics In order to avoid these difficulties physicists employ the second quantized theory of photons described below quantum electrodynamics in which photons are quantized excitations of electromagnetic modes Another difficulty is finding the proper analogue for the uncertainty principle an idea frequently attributed to Heisenberg who introduced the concept in analyzing a thought experiment involving an electron and a high energy photon However Heisenberg did not give precise mathematical definitions of what the uncertainty in these measurements meant The precise mathematical statement of the position momentum uncertainty principle is due to Kennard Pauli and Weyl The uncertainty principle applies to situations where an experimenter has a choice of measuring either one of two canonically conjugate quantities like the position and the momentum of a particle According to the uncertainty principle no matter how the particle is prepared it is not possible to make a precise prediction for both of the two alternative measurements if the outcome of the position measurement is made more certain the outcome of the momentum measurement becomes less so and vice versa A coherent state minimizes the overall uncertainty as far as quantum mechanics allows Quantum optics makes use of coherent states for modes of the electromagnetic field There is a tradeoff reminiscent of the position momentum uncertainty relation between measurements of an electromagnetic wave s amplitude and its phase This is sometimes informally expressed in terms of the uncertainty in the number of photons present in the electromagnetic wave DN displaystyle Delta N and the uncertainty in the phase of the wave Dϕ displaystyle Delta phi However this cannot be an uncertainty relation of the Kennard Pauli Weyl type since unlike position and momentum the phase ϕ displaystyle phi cannot be represented by a Hermitian operator Bose Einstein model of a photon gasIn 1924 Satyendra Nath Bose derived Planck s law of black body radiation without using any electromagnetism but rather by using a modification of coarse grained counting of phase space Einstein showed that this modification is equivalent to assuming that photons are rigorously identical and that it implied a mysterious non local interaction now understood as the requirement for a symmetric quantum mechanical state This work led to the concept of coherent states and the development of the laser In the same papers Einstein extended Bose s formalism to material particles bosons and predicted that they would condense into their lowest quantum state at low enough temperatures this Bose Einstein condensation was observed experimentally in 1995 It was later used by Lene Hau to slow and then completely stop light in 1999 and 2001 The modern view on this is that photons are by virtue of their integer spin bosons as opposed to fermions with half integer spin By the spin statistics theorem all bosons obey Bose Einstein statistics whereas all fermions obey Fermi Dirac statistics Stimulated and spontaneous emissionStimulated emission in which photons clone themselves was predicted by Einstein in his kinetic analysis and led to the development of the laser Einstein s derivation inspired further developments in the quantum treatment of light which led to the statistical interpretation of quantum mechanics In 1916 Albert Einstein showed that Planck s radiation law could be derived from a semi classical statistical treatment of photons and atoms which implies a link between the rates at which atoms emit and absorb photons The condition follows from the assumption that functions of the emission and absorption of radiation by the atoms are independent of each other and that thermal equilibrium is made by way of the radiation s interaction with the atoms Consider a cavity in thermal equilibrium with all parts of itself and filled with electromagnetic radiation and that the atoms can emit and absorb that radiation Thermal equilibrium requires that the energy density r n displaystyle rho nu of photons with frequency n displaystyle nu which is proportional to their number density is on average constant in time hence the rate at which photons of any particular frequency are emitted must equal the rate at which they are absorbed Einstein began by postulating simple proportionality relations for the different reaction rates involved In his model the rate Rji displaystyle R ji for a system to absorb a photon of frequency n displaystyle nu and transition from a lower energy Ej displaystyle E j to a higher energy Ei displaystyle E i is proportional to the number Nj displaystyle N j of atoms with energy Ej displaystyle E j and to the energy density r n displaystyle rho nu of ambient photons of that frequency Rji NjBjir n displaystyle R ji N j B ji rho nu where Bji displaystyle B ji is the rate constant for absorption For the reverse process there are two possibilities spontaneous emission of a photon or the emission of a photon initiated by the interaction of the atom with a passing photon and the return of the atom to the lower energy state Following Einstein s approach the corresponding rate Rij displaystyle R ij for the emission of photons of frequency n displaystyle nu and transition from a higher energy Ei displaystyle E i to a lower energy Ej displaystyle E j is Rij NiAij NiBijr n displaystyle R ij N i A ij N i B ij rho nu where Aij displaystyle A ij is the rate constant for emitting a photon spontaneously and Bij displaystyle B ij is the rate constant for emissions in response to ambient photons induced or stimulated emission In thermodynamic equilibrium the number of atoms in state i displaystyle i and those in state j displaystyle j must on average be constant hence the rates Rji displaystyle R ji and Rij displaystyle R ij must be equal Also by arguments analogous to the derivation of Boltzmann statistics the ratio of Ni displaystyle N i and Nj displaystyle N j is gi gjexp Ej Ei kT displaystyle g i g j exp E j E i kT where gi displaystyle g i and gj displaystyle g j are the degeneracy of the state i displaystyle i and that of j displaystyle j respectively Ei displaystyle E i and Ej displaystyle E j their energies k displaystyle k the Boltzmann constant and T displaystyle T the system s temperature From this it is readily derived that giBij gjBji displaystyle g i B ij g j B ji and Aij 8phn3c3Bij displaystyle A ij frac 8 pi h nu 3 c 3 B ij The Aij displaystyle A ij and Bij displaystyle B ij are collectively known as the Einstein coefficients Einstein could not fully justify his rate equations but claimed that it should be possible to calculate the coefficients Aij displaystyle A ij Bji displaystyle B ji and Bij displaystyle B ij once physicists had obtained mechanics and electrodynamics modified to accommodate the quantum hypothesis Not long thereafter in 1926 Paul Dirac derived the Bij displaystyle B ij rate constants by using a semiclassical approach and in 1927 succeeded in deriving all the rate constants from first principles within the framework of quantum theory Dirac s work was the foundation of quantum electrodynamics i e the quantization of the electromagnetic field itself Dirac s approach is also called second quantization or quantum field theory earlier quantum mechanical treatments only treat material particles as quantum mechanical not the electromagnetic field Einstein was troubled by the fact that his theory seemed incomplete since it did not determine the direction of a spontaneously emitted photon A probabilistic nature of light particle motion was first considered by Newton in his treatment of birefringence and more generally of the splitting of light beams at interfaces into a transmitted beam and a reflected beam Newton hypothesized that hidden variables in the light particle determined which of the two paths a single photon would take Similarly Einstein hoped for a more complete theory that would leave nothing to chance beginning his separation from quantum mechanics Ironically Max Born s probabilistic interpretation of the wave function was inspired by Einstein s later work searching for a more complete theory Quantum field theoryQuantization of the electromagnetic field Different electromagnetic modes such as those depicted here can be treated as independent simple harmonic oscillators A photon corresponds to a unit of energy E hn in its electromagnetic mode In 1910 Peter Debye derived Planck s law of black body radiation from a relatively simple assumption He decomposed the electromagnetic field in a cavity into its Fourier modes and assumed that the energy in any mode was an integer multiple of hn displaystyle h nu where n displaystyle nu is the frequency of the electromagnetic mode Planck s law of black body radiation follows immediately as a geometric sum However Debye s approach failed to give the correct formula for the energy fluctuations of black body radiation which were derived by Einstein in 1909 In 1925 Born Heisenberg and Jordan reinterpreted Debye s concept in a key way As may be shown classically the Fourier modes of the electromagnetic field a complete set of electromagnetic plane waves indexed by their wave vector k and polarization state are equivalent to a set of uncoupled simple harmonic oscillators Treated quantum mechanically the energy levels of such oscillators are known to be E nhn displaystyle E nh nu where n displaystyle nu is the oscillator frequency The key new step was to identify an electromagnetic mode with energy E nhn displaystyle E nh nu as a state with n displaystyle n photons each of energy hn displaystyle h nu This approach gives the correct energy fluctuation formula Feynman diagram of two electrons interacting by exchange of a virtual photon Dirac took this one step further He treated the interaction between a charge and an electromagnetic field as a small perturbation that induces transitions in the photon states changing the numbers of photons in the modes while conserving energy and momentum overall Dirac was able to derive Einstein s Aij displaystyle A ij and Bij displaystyle B ij coefficients from first principles and showed that the Bose Einstein statistics of photons is a natural consequence of quantizing the electromagnetic field correctly Bose s reasoning went in the opposite direction he derived Planck s law of black body radiation by assuming B E statistics In Dirac s time it was not yet known that all bosons including photons must obey Bose Einstein statistics Dirac s second order perturbation theory can involve virtual photons transient intermediate states of the electromagnetic field the static electric and magnetic interactions are mediated by such virtual photons In such quantum field theories the probability amplitude of observable events is calculated by summing over all possible intermediate steps even ones that are unphysical hence virtual photons are not constrained to satisfy E pc displaystyle E pc and may have extra polarization states depending on the gauge used virtual photons may have three or four polarization states instead of the two states of real photons Although these transient virtual photons can never be observed they contribute measurably to the probabilities of observable events Indeed such second order and higher order perturbation calculations can give apparently infinite contributions to the sum Such unphysical results are corrected for using the technique of renormalization Other virtual particles may contribute to the summation as well for example two photons may interact indirectly through virtual electron positron pairs Such photon photon scattering see two photon physics as well as electron photon scattering is meant to be one of the modes of operations of the planned particle accelerator the International Linear Collider In modern physics notation the quantum state of the electromagnetic field is written as a Fock state a tensor product of the states for each electromagnetic mode nk0 nk1 nkn displaystyle n k 0 rangle otimes n k 1 rangle otimes dots otimes n k n rangle dots where nki displaystyle n k i rangle represents the state in which nki displaystyle n k i photons are in the mode ki displaystyle k i In this notation the creation of a new photon in mode ki displaystyle k i e g emitted from an atomic transition is written as nki nki 1 displaystyle n k i rangle rightarrow n k i 1 rangle This notation merely expresses the concept of Born Heisenberg and Jordan described above and does not add any physics As a gauge boson The electromagnetic field can be understood as a gauge field i e as a field that results from requiring that a gauge symmetry holds independently at every position in spacetime For the electromagnetic field this gauge symmetry is the Abelian U 1 symmetry of complex numbers of absolute value 1 which reflects the ability to vary the phase of a complex field without affecting observables or real valued functions made from it such as the energy or the Lagrangian The quanta of an Abelian gauge field must be massless uncharged bosons as long as the symmetry is not broken hence the photon is predicted to be massless and to have zero electric charge and integer spin The particular form of the electromagnetic interaction specifies that the photon must have spin 1 thus its helicity must be ℏ displaystyle pm hbar These two spin components correspond to the classical concepts of right handed and left handed circularly polarized light However the transient virtual photons of quantum electrodynamics may also adopt unphysical polarization states In the prevailing Standard Model of physics the photon is one of four gauge bosons in the electroweak interaction the other three are denoted W W and Z0 and are responsible for the weak interaction Unlike the photon these gauge bosons have mass owing to a mechanism that breaks their SU 2 gauge symmetry The unification of the photon with W and Z gauge bosons in the electroweak interaction was accomplished by Sheldon Glashow Abdus Salam and Steven Weinberg for which they were awarded the 1979 Nobel Prize in physics Physicists continue to hypothesize grand unified theories that connect these four gauge bosons with the eight gluon gauge bosons of quantum chromodynamics however key predictions of these theories such as proton decay have not been observed experimentally Hadronic properties Measurements of the interaction between energetic photons and hadrons show that the interaction is much more intense than expected by the interaction of merely photons with the hadron s electric charge Furthermore the interaction of energetic photons with protons is similar to the interaction of photons with neutrons in spite of the fact that the electrical charge structures of protons and neutrons are substantially different A theory called Vector Meson Dominance VMD was developed to explain this effect According to VMD the photon is a superposition of the pure electromagnetic photon which interacts only with electric charges and vector mesons which mediate the residual nuclear force However if experimentally probed at very short distances the intrinsic structure of the photon appears to have as components a charge neutral flux of quarks and gluons quasi free according to asymptotic freedom in QCD That flux is described by the photon structure function A review by Nisius 2000 presented a comprehensive comparison of data with theoretical predictions Contributions to the mass of a system The energy of a system that emits a photon is decreased by the energy E displaystyle E of the photon as measured in the rest frame of the emitting system which may result in a reduction in mass in the amount E c2 displaystyle E c 2 Similarly the mass of a system that absorbs a photon is increased by a corresponding amount As an application the energy balance of nuclear reactions involving photons is commonly written in terms of the masses of the nuclei involved and terms of the form E c2 displaystyle E c 2 for the gamma photons and for other relevant energies such as the recoil energy of nuclei This concept is applied in key predictions of quantum electrodynamics QED see above In that theory the mass of electrons or more generally leptons is modified by including the mass contributions of virtual photons in a technique known as renormalization Such radiative corrections contribute to a number of predictions of QED such as the magnetic dipole moment of leptons the Lamb shift and the hyperfine structure of bound lepton pairs such as muonium and positronium Since photons contribute to the stress energy tensor they exert a gravitational attraction on other objects according to the theory of general relativity Conversely photons are themselves affected by gravity their normally straight trajectories may be bent by warped spacetime as in gravitational lensing and their frequencies may be lowered by moving to a higher gravitational potential as in the Pound Rebka experiment However these effects are not specific to photons exactly the same effects would be predicted for classical electromagnetic waves In matterLight that travels through transparent matter does so at a lower speed than c the speed of light in vacuum The factor by which the speed is decreased is called the refractive index of the material In a classical wave picture the slowing can be explained by the light inducing electric polarization in the matter the polarized matter radiating new light and that new light interfering with the original light wave to form a delayed wave In a particle picture the slowing can instead be described as a blending of the photon with quantum excitations of the matter to produce quasi particles known as polaritons Polaritons have a nonzero effective mass which means that they cannot travel at c Light of different frequencies may travel through matter at different speeds this is called dispersion not to be confused with scattering In some cases it can result in extremely slow speeds of light in matter The effects of photon interactions with other quasi particles may be observed directly in Raman scattering and Brillouin scattering Photons can be scattered by matter For example photons scatter so many times in the solar radiative zone after leaving the core of the Sun that radiant energy takes about a million years to reach the convection zone However photons emitted from the sun s photosphere take only 8 3 minutes to reach Earth Photons can also be absorbed by nuclei atoms or molecules provoking transitions between their energy levels A classic example is the molecular transition of retinal C20H28O which is responsible for vision as discovered in 1958 by Nobel laureate biochemist George Wald and co workers The absorption provokes a cis trans isomerization that in combination with other such transitions is transduced into nerve impulses The absorption of photons can even break chemical bonds as in the photodissociation of chlorine this is the subject of photochemistry Technological applicationsPhotons have many applications in technology These examples are chosen to illustrate applications of photons per se rather than general optical devices such as lenses etc that could operate under a classical theory of light The laser is an important application and is discussed above under stimulated emission Individual photons can be detected by several methods The classic photomultiplier tube exploits the photoelectric effect a photon of sufficient energy strikes a metal plate and knocks free an electron initiating an ever amplifying avalanche of electrons Semiconductor charge coupled device chips use a similar effect an incident photon generates a charge on a microscopic capacitor that can be detected Other detectors such as Geiger counters use the ability of photons to ionize gas molecules contained in the device causing a detectable change of conductivity of the gas Planck s energy formula E hn displaystyle E h nu is often used by engineers and chemists in design both to compute the change in energy resulting from a photon absorption and to determine the frequency of the light emitted from a given photon emission For example the emission spectrum of a gas discharge lamp can be altered by filling it with mixtures of gases with different electronic energy level configurations Under some conditions an energy transition can be excited by two photons that individually would be insufficient This allows for higher resolution microscopy because the sample absorbs energy only in the spectrum where two beams of different colors overlap significantly which can be made much smaller than the excitation volume of a single beam see two photon excitation microscopy Moreover these photons cause less damage to the sample since they are of lower energy In some cases two energy transitions can be coupled so that as one system absorbs a photon another nearby system steals its energy and re emits a photon of a different frequency This is the basis of fluorescence resonance energy transfer a technique that is used in molecular biology to study the interaction of suitable proteins Several different kinds of hardware random number generators involve the detection of single photons In one example for each bit in the random sequence that is to be produced a photon is sent to a beam splitter In such a situation there are two possible outcomes of equal probability The actual outcome is used to determine whether the next bit in the sequence is 0 or 1 Quantum optics and computationMuch research has been devoted to applications of photons in the field of quantum optics Photons seem well suited to be elements of an extremely fast quantum computer and the quantum entanglement of photons is a focus of research Nonlinear optical processes are another active research area with topics such as two photon absorption self phase modulation modulational instability and optical parametric oscillators However such processes generally do not require the assumption of photons per se they may often be modeled by treating atoms as nonlinear oscillators The nonlinear process of spontaneous parametric down conversion is often used to produce single photon states Finally photons are essential in some aspects of optical communication especially for quantum cryptography Two photon physics studies interactions between photons which are rare In 2018 Massachusetts Institute of Technology researchers announced the discovery of bound photon triplets which may involve polaritons See alsoPhysics portalAdvanced Photon Source at Argonne National Laboratory Ballistic photon Dirac equation Doppler effect EPR paradox High energy X ray imaging technology Luminiferous aether Medipix Phonon Photography Photon counting Photon epoch Photonic molecule Photonics Single photon source Static forces and virtual particle exchange Variable speed of lightNotesAlthough the 1967 Elsevier translation of Planck s Nobel Lecture interprets Planck s Lichtquant as photon the more literal 1922 translation by Hans Thacher Clarke and Ludwik Silberstein Planck Max 1922 via Google Books The Origin and Development of the Quantum Theory Clarendon Press via Internet Archive archive org 2007 03 01 uses light quantum No evidence is known that Planck himself had used the term photon as of 1926 see also Asimov credits Arthur Compton with defining quanta of energy as photons in 1923 However it is possible if the system interacts with a third particle or field for the annihilation to produce one photon since the third particle or field can absorb momentum equal and opposite to the single photon providing dynamic balance An example is when a positron annihilates with a bound atomic electron in that case it is possible for only one photon to be emitted as the nuclear Coulomb field breaks translational symmetry The phrase no matter how intense refers to intensities below approximately 1013 W cm2 at which point perturbation theory begins to break down In contrast in the intense regime which for visible light is above approximately 1014 W cm2 the classical wave description correctly predicts the energy acquired by electrons called ponderomotive energy By comparison sunlight is only about 0 1 W cm2 These experiments produce results that cannot be explained by any classical theory of light since they involve anticorrelations that result from the quantum measurement process In 1974 the first such experiment was carried out by Clauser who reported a violation of a classical Cauchy Schwarz inequality In 1977 Kimble et al demonstrated an analogous anti bunching effect of photons interacting with a beam splitter this approach was simplified and sources of error eliminated in the photon anticorrelation experiment of Grangier Roger amp Aspect 1986 This work is reviewed and simplified further in Thorn Neel et al 2004 The issue was first formulated by Theodore Duddell Newton and Eugene Wigner The challenges arise from the fundamental nature of the Lorentz group which describes 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upmanship Why multiphoton imaging is more than a gimmick Neuron 18 3 351 357 doi 10 1016 S0896 6273 00 81237 4 PMID 9115730 S2CID 2414593 Lakowicz J R 2006 Principles of Fluorescence Spectroscopy Springer pp 529 ff ISBN 978 0 387 31278 1 Jennewein T Achleitner U Weihs G Weinfurter H Zeilinger A 2000 A fast and compact quantum random number generator Review of Scientific Instruments 71 4 1675 1680 arXiv quant ph 9912118 Bibcode 2000RScI 71 1675J doi 10 1063 1 1150518 S2CID 13118587 Stefanov A Gisin N Guinnard O Guinnard L Zbiden H 2000 Optical quantum random number generator Journal of Modern Optics 47 4 595 598 doi 10 1080 095003400147908 Introductory level material on the various sub fields of quantum optics can be found in Fox M 2006 Quantum Optics An introduction Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 856673 1 via Google Books Hignett Katherine 16 February 2018 Physics creates new form of light that could drive the quantum computing revolution Newsweek Archived from the original on 25 April 2021 Retrieved 17 February 2018 Liang Qi Yu et al 16 February 2018 Observation of three photon bound states in a quantum nonlinear medium Science 359 6377 783 786 arXiv 1709 01478 Bibcode 2018Sci 359 783L doi 10 1126 science aao7293 PMC 6467536 PMID 29449489 Further readingBy date of publicationAlonso M Finn E J 1968 Fundamental University Physics Vol III Quantum and Statistical Physics Addison Wesley ISBN 978 0 201 00262 1 Clauser J F 1974 Experimental distinction between the quantum and classical field theoretic predictions for the photoelectric effect Physical Review D 9 4 853 860 Bibcode 1974PhRvD 9 853C doi 10 1103 PhysRevD 9 853 S2CID 118320287 Archived from the original on 2019 01 24 Retrieved 2019 01 03 Pais Abraham 1982 Subtle is the Lord The Science and the Life of Albert Einstein Oxford University Press Feynman Richard 1985 QED The Strange Theory of Light and Matter Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 12575 6 Grangier P Roger G Aspect A 1986 Experimental evidence for a photon anticorrelation effect on a beam splitter A new light on single photon interferences Europhysics Letters 1 4 173 179 Bibcode 1986EL 1 173G CiteSeerX 10 1 1 178 4356 doi 10 1209 0295 5075 1 4 004 S2CID 250837011 Lamb Willis E 1995 Anti photon Applied Physics B 60 2 3 77 84 Bibcode 1995ApPhB 60 77L doi 10 1007 BF01135846 S2CID 263785760 Special supplemental issue PDF Optics and Photonics News Vol 14 October 2003 Archived from the original PDF on June 5 2022 Roychoudhuri C Rajarshi R 2003 The nature of light What is a photon Optics and Photonics News Vol 14 pp S1 Supplement Zajonc A 2003 Light reconsidered Optics and Photonics News Vol 14 pp S2 S5 Supplement Loudon R 2003 What is a photon Optics and Photonics News Vol 14 pp S6 S11 Supplement Finkelstein D 2003 What is a photon Optics and Photonics News Vol 14 pp S12 S17 Supplement Muthukrishnan A Scully M O Zubairy M S 2003 The concept of the photon revisited Optics and Photonics News Vol 14 pp S18 S27 Supplement Mack H Schleich Wolfgang P 2003 A photon viewed from Wigner phase space Optics and Photonics News Vol 14 pp S28 S35 Supplement Glauber R 2005 One Hundred Years of Light Quanta PDF Nobel Prize Physics Lecture Archived from the original PDF on 2008 07 23 Retrieved 2009 06 29 Hentschel K 2007 Light quanta The maturing of a concept by the stepwise accretion of meaning Physics and Philosophy 1 2 1 20 Archived from the original on 2014 05 29 Retrieved 2014 06 29 Education with single photonsThorn J J Neel M S Donato V W Bergreen G S Davies R E Beck M 2004 Observing the quantum behavior of light in an undergraduate laboratory PDF American Journal of Physics 72 9 1210 1219 Bibcode 2004AmJPh 72 1210T doi 10 1119 1 1737397 Archived PDF from the original on 2016 02 01 Retrieved 2009 06 29 Bronner P Strunz Andreas Silberhorn Christine Meyn Jan Peter 2009 Interactive screen experiments with single photons European Journal of Physics 30 2 345 353 Bibcode 2009EJPh 30 345B doi 10 1088 0143 0807 30 2 014 S2CID 38626417 Archived from the original on 2019 07 01 Retrieved 2009 07 17 External linksQuotations related to Photon at Wikiquote The dictionary definition of photon at Wiktionary Media related to Photon at Wikimedia Commons