124 lines
6.2 KiB
HTML
124 lines
6.2 KiB
HTML
<p>If will take a closer look at the Hydrogen atom, we already know
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that it is made of a proton with electric charge +1 and an electron
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with charge -1. Particles with opposite electric charge attract each
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other just like magnets. This is an example of the electromagnetic
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force, or "the electromagnetic interaction".
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<h2>What is interaction?</h2>
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<p>How do the proton and the electron know about each other? How do
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they "interact", and what do we mean by “interaction”? Particles
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interact with each other by exchanging other particles. How does this
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work?</p>
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<p>Two astronauts in space, being outside of their spaceship,
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repairing their spacecraft. Both are floating around, and as it
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happens, are closing up. One of the two would now throw a tool, that
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the other would eventually catch. What happened? The throwing
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astronaut transferred momentum onto the tool he threw. He is not fixed
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to the spacecraft, but floating in space freely. The momentum he will
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achieve from throwing the tool will carry him in the opposite
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direction of the tool. The other astronaut, catching the tool, will
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receive the tools momentum, carrying him in the direction of
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flight. What happened? The two astronauts are now floating away from
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each other, whereas they were approaching each other before. They
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exchanged a tool, and transmitted momentum from one another, a process
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particle physicists call "scattering". Sadly, this example only works
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for a repelling interaction. However, there is a similar example, that
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also works for an attractive interaction, which is a little more
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complicated.</p>
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<img src="EM_spectrum.svg">
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<p>[READ MORE: Here is another analogy: Two people are sitting in
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small boats on a huge and quiet lake. Both boats are approaching each
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other slowly. If one of the two people now throws a ball to the other
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person, who will catch it. If the ball is very heavy, both boats will
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then move away from each other, because the inertia of the ball
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transmitted momentum to both boats. The one boat gained momentum by
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the person throwing the ball, and the other picked up momentum by the
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person catching the ball. What happened? The boats changed direction,
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they exchanged momentum by exchanging a basket ball. The boats
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interacted with each other, by exchanging a ball as their
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messenger.</p>
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<p>The above analogy is useful to understand repulsion of particles by
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exchange of some kind of “messenger”, for example two electrons, due
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to their electric charge. The same analogy is possible for attraction,
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only requiring the change of the basketball for a boomerang and the
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directions that it is thrown and caught. If the person throwing the
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boomerang throws it away from the other boat, and it loops around so
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that the person catching it is facing away from the first boat, the
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exchanged momentum is just opposite to that for the analogy for
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repulsion.]</p>
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<h2>Electromagnetism and Light</h2>
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<p>What is that object being thrown between the proton and the
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electron exchange in order to communicate their attraction to each
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other? The answer is simple, it’s the photon. These photons are the
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same particles that make up the light that comes to us from the sun
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and enables us to see the world around us. But the photons we can see
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are only a small part of the full spectrum of the photons that are out
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there. Visible light, X-rays, microwaves and radio waves are all
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photons. The only difference is that they have a higher or lower
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energy than the light we can see - much like the force that keeps us
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on the surface of our planet and the force that binds our planet to
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the sun is the same - only that there is a different amount of energy
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involved.</p>
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<p>[The most energetic photon particle discovered is in the Tev
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range. So if the range of the visible photon our eyes can detect is
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scaled to the width of a human hair, the range of the
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electromagnetic spectrum is the distance between the earth and the
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moon!] </p>
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<p>[The photons that are described in the figure are characterized by
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a wavelength, meaning that photons are waves. But why did we say that
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the photon is a particle before? The reason for this is that the
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physical laws we are familiar with (i.e. Newtonian mechanics) cannot
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be applied at very small scales. When at these small scales, quantum
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mechanics apply. One of those rules of quantum mechanics is that all
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particles have both particle and wave properties. This is referred to
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as the wave-particle duality.]</p>
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<h2>What is a photon?</h2>
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<p>First of all a photon is an elementary particle, which means that -
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as far as we know - it doesn’t have any substructure. It is not a
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composite object, and not divisible into smaller building blocks. The
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photon belongs to a group of particles that we call bosons - we will
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encounter other members of that group later on. Bosons are
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characterised by the fact that they have integer spin, where spin is
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an intrinsic property of particles that can take different values, but
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never changes, much the like charge we have encountered earlier. Other
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particles, such as the electron and the quarks, have spin ½ and are
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called fermions (all particles with half-integer spin are fermions).</p>
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<p>Like all other bosons, photons can - given that sufficient energy is
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available - be produced out of nowhere and can also vanish into
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nothingness, leaving behind nothing but energy. Therefore, the
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electrons and protons in the atoms - as opposed to the persons in
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the boats we used as an analogy earlier - do not need to carry around
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their messengers (in our case photons), as they can simply be produced
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by all particles that carry charge. </p>
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<h2>Outlook</h2>
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<p>The exchange of photons between particles is what we call
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"electromagnetic interaction", The photon can create either attraction
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or repulsion between particles and transport momentum as well as
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energy. Now we know what binds together the electron and the nucleus
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to form atoms, such as the Hydrogen atom or the Helium atom that we
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used as examples - it is the electromagnetic interaction, the exchange
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of photons, communicating the attraction between the particles due to
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their opposite charge. In the next chapter, we will learn what glues
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together the quarks to form protons and neutrons.</p>
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