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collision of photons


Ankit Gupta

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I have not heard of two photons creating an electron-positron pair. Only one single photon carrying two electron mass at least, and near a heavy nucleus. This is also what the Wiki article seems to suggest:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pair_production#Energy

 

Though, as the annihilation of an electron-positron pair must be reversible, maybe the process with two photons can exist.

 

Could it be that the creation of a pair requires too much accuracy from the photons? Fun, this would resemble entropy, but with few particles.

 

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Apart from carrying no charge, photons are also bosons, which permits them to occupy the same state. Electrons couldn't, for being fermions.

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  • 2 weeks later...

I thought I read that photons were their own anti-particle...and that they usually don't interact as they carry no charge and seldom get close enough to interact, but if they do happen to collide, they anniliate into heat....edd

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