Jump to content

Wave-Particle Duality Theory


keyboard45

Recommended Posts

I remember about 5 years ago i was reading a book on quantum physics on a holiday, it mentioned wave-particle duality, that light was a wave and a particle, but nothing could explain how it could be both at the same time. so i asked myself how it could be possible.


I think i came up with a good theory, but my knowledge on physics and quantum physics is somewhat poor. i am good with chemistry, atoms, protons, electrons, neutrons etc, but when things get smaller, photons, quarks, mass and energy etc, my terminology gets a bit lost. anyway, i will give you my basic idea of how a particle can behave like a wave and particle, and you can laugh and shut me down, but it would be nice if at least one person can see where im coming from.


My theoretical rules of light...


My theoretical light particle, has a positive and a negative charge, a bit like a magnet


Here is my positive charge = I

Here is my negative charge = o

Here is the particle, when both charges meet each other = Φ


One of the charges (for the purpose of this diagram, i am going to say the positive charge), moves twice as fast as the negative charge.


Once a charge has occupied a space, it cannot occupy the same space again.


The two charges like to stay as close together as possible, without occupying the same space twice.


d1_zps3392b15e.jpg


Unfortunately, it is not easy to see what's going on, try to just pay attention to the final pattern, where the positive and the negative charge meet


d2_zps127b0c8a.jpg


Here is a step by step guide on how i achieved this diagram


d3_zpsd7261d39.jpg


Here are the steps somewhat explained...


Step1 positive charge (pos) and negative charge (neg) exist.


Step2 pos moves 2 steps away from occupied space (as stated earlier, positive charge moves twice as fast as neg charge), pos moves 1 step down away from original space, and 1 step to the right to stay close to the other charge.


Step3 neg moves 1 step away from occupied space, but remains close to pos, so therefore moves 1 space down.


Step4 pos moves 1 step left and occupies space where neg is, however has to move one space down, as it travels 2 steps for every 1 step the pos moves as stated earlier (my twice as fast rule), but can't occupy its previous space (also stated earlier).


Step5 neg moves 1 step down, to meet pos charge, now both charges are occupying the same space.


Step6 pos moves 1 space down (or right) away from previously occupied space, then moves 1 more space trying to remain close to neg.


Step7 neg moves inbetween the space which has been occupied by pos, as this area has the most charge.


Step8 pos moves 2 spaces around neg remaining close


Step9 neg follows pos moving 1 space to the rights, occupying space with the pos again.


Please note, that when the pos moves 2 spaces, and the neg then moves 1 space, it is happening simultaneously, but it is easier to explain when broken down into smaller steps.

Edited by keyboard45
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Light is an electro-magnetic force. It is made up of particles called photons. Is it possible that a photon exists as a lepton and a tau particle, and isn't made up of a boson, but simply occupies a field of bosons.

In which case, my positive and negative charge as mentioned earlier, are leptons amd tau particles. A lepton exerting a charge of -1 and a tau particle also exerting a charge of -1, however being the antimatter of a electron and being much heavier, it may exert a gravitational force of +2, creating a particle with no mass, the photon?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Could a Photon be a Baryon made of 4 quarks? Like a Proton and a Neutron, but not one or the other? A Baryon that is made up of UUDD quarks, constantly swapping one of its U quarks for a D quark and vice versa, instantaneously.

The resultant Charge, Mass and Spin of a UUDD baryon would be:

 

Charge 0

Mass 0

Spin +/- 1

 

The same as a Photon, a seemingly "Vacant" Boson.

 

Charge

 

Charge of Quarks

 

up + up + down

2/3 + 2/3 + -1/3 = 1

 

up + down + down

2/3 + -1/3 + -1/3 = 0

 

Charge of Antiquarks

 

up + down + down

-2/3 + -2/3 + 1/3 = -1

 

up + down + down

-2/3 + 1/3 + 1/3 = 0

 

Overall Charge = (1 + -1) or (0 + -0) = 0

 

Mass

 

Mass of Quarks

 

up + up + down

2.4 + 2.4 + 4.8 = 9.6

 

up + down + down

2.4 + 4.8 + 4.8 = 12

 

Mass of Antiquarks

 

 

up + up + down

-2.4 + -2.4 + -4.8 = -9.6

 

up + down + down

-2.4 + -4.8 + -4.8 = -12

 

Overall Mass = (9.6 + -9.6) or (12 + -12) = 0

 

Spin

 

Spin of Quarks

 

up + up + down

1/2 + 1/2 + -1/2 = 1/2

 

up + down + down

1/2 + -1/2 + -1/2 = -1/2

 

Spin of Antiquarks

 

up + up + down

-1/2 + -1/2 + 1/2 = -/12

 

up + down + down

-1/2 + 1/2 + 1/2 = 1/2

 

Overall Spin = (1/2 + 1/2) or (-1/2 + -1/2) = +/- 1

Link to comment
Share on other sites

You are probably right, but i have read that a photon has a spin of +/- 1, not just 1.

 

If (uud+_udd) or (udd+_uud) = something with the properties: charge 0, mass 0, spin +/-1. Then could it be said that this is what a photon is made of?

 

Note: _udd and _uud are antiquarks.

Note2: the above "equation" is what i was trying to show in my previous post, all the math is there :) also i accept that my wild speculation is most likely flawed and incorrect. But its a good way to learn more about quantum physics so makes me happy!

Edited by keyboard45
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Spin 1 refers to the magnitude (s), not the projection of the spin vector (m). It could be spin "up" (m=1) or spin "down" (m=-1). For photons the is no option for zero projection, but that's not the case for a composite system.

 

Quarks have mass. How do you get a massless particle by combining them?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I am slightly confused how, say: a proton and a antiproton can annihilate each other, but there would be mass left over? Surely if they can annihilate each other to produce a photon. There will be no mass left over.

 

They will produce two photons (or more) and no, there's no mass left over. The mass is converted into another form of energy. This would not happen if the antiproton had a negative mass, because then the system would have no net mass, so there would be no photons.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thankyou for your insight on net mass, i have been doing some more light reading on mass and systems, and how "mass and energy exist alongside each other", that net mass and energy, do not change into each other relatively, rather; both are bames for the same thing. So, now it has me thinking...

 

When the baryon and its antiparticle are annihilated and the photons are produced, the mass of the baryons are converted into energy (light), but as mass and energy are the "same thing", as stated above, then maybe a photon does indeed have a mass, or there is something else working alongside the proton, hidden, that is acquiring mass. I feel as if there is something missing from the equation...

 

On the other hand, i am starting to doubt that a antiproton, or any antiparticle or antiquark, has a positive mass. A net mass of 0, is still mass. If one object has 1 mass and the other has -1 mass, there is still mass, but there is a net mass of 0, and there is nothing wrong with that.

 

However, please recommend some more reading material to convince me otherwise.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thankyou for your insight on net mass, i have been doing some more light reading on mass and systems, and how "mass and energy exist alongside each other", that net mass and energy, do not change into each other relatively, rather; both are bames for the same thing. So, now it has me thinking...

 

When the baryon and its antiparticle are annihilated and the photons are produced, the mass of the baryons are converted into energy (light), but as mass and energy are the "same thing", as stated above, then maybe a photon does indeed have a mass,

 

No, it does not. If it moves at c, it can't have mass.

 

or there is something else working alongside the proton, hidden, that is acquiring mass.

 

Hidden?

 

 

I feel as if there is something missing from the equation...

 

What is missing? How would you test for this mystery particle?

 

On the other hand, i am starting to doubt that a antiproton, or any antiparticle or antiquark, has a positive mass.

 

You mean, other than the experiments that measured the mass? Such as the measurement that shows (pdf) the fractional mass difference of a positron vs electron is no larger than 8 x 10^-9?

 

A net mass of 0, is still mass. If one object has 1 mass and the other has -1 mass, there is still mass, but there is a net mass of 0, and there is nothing wrong with that.

 

Yes, there is. If there's no net mass and the system is at rest, there is no energy to create photons in the annihilation. You've tossed conservation of energy out the window.

 

However, please recommend some more reading material to convince me otherwise.

 

They're called physics textbooks. That way you could see why your idea is wrong before you waste more time trying to flesh it out.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

One question. If a photon moves at c, and therefore cant have mass, then does that also mean that if it moves at c, it cant have energy? As energy, mass and c are all part of the same equation.

 

If the mass is 0...

E=mc2

= 0 x (3 x 108 ms-1)2

E= 0?

 

Or, if a photon IS 3 x 108 ms-1

And there is NO mass. Then is the equation:

E = (3 x 108 Ms-1)

 

I am very lost.

 

Note: 2 represents "squared"

Edited by keyboard45
Link to comment
Share on other sites

When a photon is absorbed by an atom, does the atom lose some of its mass? Or does it keep its mass, as the electron hasn't left the atom, but just jumped to a higher energy level?

 

Could something with a mass travel at the speed of light, or is that scientifically impossible?

 

I am still hung up on how a particle like object can travel in a wave like fashion, without having any charge or mass. Does light still move as a wave in a vacuum?

 

Sorry its alot of questions.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

What would p = in the case of a photon? Doesnt p = mv? and with a mass of 0, p would also = O, and therefore E would = 0. Going round in circles here!

 

p=mv is a classical equation, much like KE=1/2 mv^2 is. What we're discussing is some physics learned last century, not the century before that.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Light IS EMR therefore it does NOT produce EMR therefore we cannot observe light in the manner of charges as you put, nor could we do this with matter waves as all matter waves are either molecules or one type of particle - so we cannot have waves being of both charges. As far as we know in science your speculations have been disproved.

 

[Edit] Changed spelling error observer to observe

Edited by howlingmadpanda
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.