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Old 04-12-2006   #1 (permalink)
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Photons have no time

I've been trying to read more and more about QM. Last night, I read that photons do not experience time. That a photon travelling through time (relative to an observer in inertial frame) is indistinguishable from an anti-photon travelling backward in time. Strangely, I'm okay with that.

However, I'm struggling to understand that a photon released from a star 10 million light years away, from the perspective of something else, will take 10 million light years to arrive, but in it's own frame of reference arrives immediately to all places.

Can someone help shed some light ( ), and potentially assist me in clearing up mistakes in the above description? It sounds a lot like a photon is InfiniteNow, but I am trying to be objective.
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Old 04-12-2006   #2 (permalink)
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Re: Photons have no time

Well, you've reached the tip of the head of the confusion of GR. That light as a wave always propogates at a speed of c, and that photons must obey the same basic rule and that means it must travel at c irregardless of frame of reference. Thus a photon must be "unstuck in time" and yet traveling through space, or is it what defines space-time? AHHHHHHHHH!
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Old 04-12-2006   #3 (permalink)
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Re: Photons have no time

Time dilation increases as speed increases - max time dilation (ie no time at all) occurs at c, but normal matter cant get there, since photons are travel at c they have no time.


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Old 04-12-2006   #4 (permalink)
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Re: Photons have no time

Okay, that's confusing. Wouldn't that mean that all photons share a reference frame at all times?

Wait NO - because they don't always travel at c do they? Does a photon have mass when it passes through water or air or whatever? Does it experience time then?

Also, if you have an area of negative pressure (Casimir Vacuum) and you sent a photon throught it, theoretically it would travel faster the c - then it would it be going backward in time, and arrive before it left?

Wacky stuff - and I'm just as confused as you.

On the other hand, it does sort of address my question about what reference frame quantum entanglement would occur in.

Interesting though - it almost leads to a redefinition of simultaneous. I have a photon, emitted from star A 10 years ago, and a photon emitted from star B 5 years ago - when I find them, I trap them. Which photon travelled longer? Neither - they where both trapped at the same time. If I release a photon from my "photon gun" toward Alpha Centauri and another toward the Mars, fifty minutes later, my counterpart on Mars can see my photon. Four years later Alpha Centauri catches my photon. Which photon was capture first? According the photon, they were both captured at the same time. Intuitively (ie, wrongly) every event that has ever happened to any photon not travelling through a gravity distorted frame or medium thicker than vacuum occured at the exact same instant throughtout the history of the universe.

Is time itself (the difference in this instant) the effect of mass and particles on the movement of photons?

Someone stop me before I make a complete ass of myself.

TFS
[too late, isn't it?]

Never mind - the gravity question is moot - it isn't curving because it's slowing down, it's curving because the definition of "straight line" has been changed. Hold for things like water though. Unless I misunderstand photon passage through water (quite likely.)


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Old 04-12-2006   #5 (permalink)
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Re: Photons have no time

Quote:
Originally Posted by Jay-qu
Time dilation increases as speed increases - max time dilation (ie no time at all) occurs at c, but normal matter cant get there, since photons are travel at c they have no time.
This fact is the very reason I'm a determinist; The photon has, according to it's perception, already reached it's final destination, locking in all of the previously occurred events.

Time is an illusion we humans falsely judge as the unfolding of events which in truth, according to the experience of the photon, has already occured. We can't change what the photon has already experienced, to do so would change the final state of the photon and would result in a paradox of reality.

Ask the photon; All events are predestined, the future is cast in stone. BTW, this is one scientific position which fits rather nicely with my religious point of view. Restraining myself, I will not delve into my reasons for this understanding, because to do so would be off topic. Just my humble opinion................Infy


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Old 04-13-2006   #6 (permalink)
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Lightbulb Re: Photons have no time

The difficulty is that the Lorentz coordinate transformations are singular in the v --> c limit, so it's a thorny problem to relate things for the two "observers".

Quote:
Originally Posted by TheFaithfulStone
Also, if you have an area of negative pressure (Casimir Vacuum) and you sent a photon throught it, theoretically it would travel faster the c - then it would it be going backward in time, and arrive before it left?
How do you get that concluson? The Casimir effect involves the inner region having a lower pressure than the outer region. I don't see this implying v > c.


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Old 04-13-2006   #7 (permalink)
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Smile Re: Photons have no time

Ah!! it all adds up to only one conclusion, no theory is ever perfect, No one, whether it was Einstein or any body else has discovered the ultimate truth, because there cannot be any ultimate truth. We can approach it, just as the question posed by Infinitenow indicates v -> c but never reach it.



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Old 04-13-2006   #8 (permalink)
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Re: Photons have no time

Ok so negative pressure was explained well enough. Photons do not travel at speeds other than c. Refraction of light causes light to be absorbed and re-emitted in the medium it is traveling through, and thus due to absorption and re-emision times the light is perceived by us to travel at v<c.
The actual thought that I believe is missing here is that time is not defined for c because there is no inertial reference frame for c (for time to be calculated one must have an inertial reference frame). That being said, it is not that the light has not been traveling from star b for 5 less years than from star a, but that the time traveled cannot be defined by a referential frame of light (because it does not exist.) It therefore must be defined by a frame of reference that does exist.

i.e. if you were capable of traveling at the speed of light, time would cease to exist for you. Thus the photon cannot degrade by traveling from point a to point b. It can only degrade (lose power) if it interacts with matter.

Thus is the cunundrum for many of us. That is to say that travel at or above light speed is impossible for anything with mass (and something with mass is the only thing that might have the ability to measure time). That is why, to test theories of SR an extremely low mass particle with a predictable time of degradation is observed. It cannot travel at c, but relatively close to it, and time dilation can be more easily calculated for speeds near c (reason, a bigger window of observation).
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Old 04-13-2006   #9 (permalink)
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Re: Photons have no time

Quote:
Originally Posted by cwes99_03
The actual thought that I believe is missing here is that time is not defined for c because there is no inertial reference frame for c (for time to be calculated one must have an inertial reference frame).
It wasn't quite totally missing, it's an alternative way of saying "the Lorentz coordinate transformations are singular in the v --> c limit".


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Old 04-13-2006   #10 (permalink)
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Re: Photons have no time

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How do you get that concluson? The Casimir effect involves the inner region having a lower pressure than the outer region. I don't see this implying v > c.
Read it here - for that other thread.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Faster_than_light Of course, they don't say what the calculations ARE...

Here it is again. Certaintly speculative, but I didn't just totally pull it out of my rump.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scharnhorst_Effect

There is some stuff on arXiv about it, but I don't know what "birefringent" means, so...

It does kind of imply an luminferous-ether-kinda-thing doesn't it?

What about all these "slow light" experiments I've been reading about? Just changing the defraction of gas to something really high?

TFS


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