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How do scientists explain RF waves traveling, without a medium?


Capiert

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Thank you, both of you.

1 hour ago, MigL said:

They would ask "Why is a medium needed ?".

Why do water_waves need a medium? (elastic, mechanically like a flexible_spring).
Why do you exclude with electromagentism? Didn't Maxwell (also) calculate
 the (mechanical) Young's Modulus (~Flexibility)
 for electromagnetism (too)?

1 hour ago, MigL said:

They might also ask about the formatting of your posts ...

Why only might?

1 hour ago, Externet said:

Radio waves propagate same as light from the sun does without a medium.

Can you please explain that
 to me?

A wave of(=on) what?

1 hour ago, Externet said:

  Low or high frequency mean nothing.

Good.
I thought a slower frequency
 might be
 a bit helpful (simpler)
 to comprehend
 & understand.
At least for me.

1 hour ago, Externet said:

Waves in water are a mechanical disturbance, not electromagnetic.

I assume by mechanical
 you mean
 a sort of elasticity.(?)

If an ion fluid
 is vibrated
 then electromagnetic disturbances
 (such as waves)
 are also produced!
Or at least expected (by me).
E.g. Sea_water.
 (But that effect does NOT have to be with salt.)
E.g. (The) Water (molecule) is polar & has a dipole moment.
E.g. The photo_acoustic effect
 producing soundwaves (ultrasound)
 from light's interaction.
I suspect a similar process
 in reverse
 is also possible.
Perhaps in a crystal.
 

Edited by Capiert
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Quote

How do scientists explain RF waves traveling, without a medium?

Philosophy is a pseudoscience. Physics is a real science. Too often you ask philosophical questions.. ask physical questions, such as "how to measure the speed of something", "how to measure some physical quantity", etc., and you will get the right, truthful answers..

 

1 hour ago, Capiert said:

As far as I know
 water_waves travel

..one water molecule hits another molecule, which hits another molecule, and there is a momentum transfer between them in all directions, they hit something, while molecule remain at place (plus, minus, a little margin of tolerance (in global scale) )..

1 hour ago, Capiert said:

Radio_particles? (Radions?)

They are called photons..

 

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1 hour ago, Capiert said:

As far as I know
 water_waves travel
 e.g. at c.

What is that supposed to mean?  Since you used e.g. which means 'for example', you are saying, "As far as I know water_waves travel [for example] at c."

No water waves don't travel at c.

1 hour ago, Capiert said:

How do you deal
 with low frequency RF?

EM radiation and water waves are very different things.  A water wave is a disturbance in a medium.  EM waves are not a disturbance in a medium, they are a disturbance in a field.

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Hi John

14 minutes ago, John Cuthber said:

If you are heading towards the  transmitter really fast, a radio wave is light.

That's a good example!

14 minutes ago, John Cuthber said:

And a vacuum can't tell how fast you are going.

What do you mean there, John?
I DON'T think a vacuum
 can tell us anything.

We would need a(nother) speed (as) reference
 which could be either in
 or out
 of the vacuum
 (to compare speeds).
DON'T you think?

 

 

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7 minutes ago, Sensei said:

Philosophy is a pseudoscience. Physics is a real science. Too often you ask philosophical questions.. ask physical questions, such as "how to measure the speed of something", "how to measure some physical quantity", etc., and you will get the right, truthful answers..

Hi Sensei
This (thread's) question
 is a real question
 expecting real answers.

I'm trying to figure it out.

"Your" questions
 DON'T answer
 "my" question.

But they can help.

7 minutes ago, Sensei said:

..one water molecule hits another molecule, which hits another molecule, and there is a momentum transfer between them in all directions, they hit something, while molecule remain at place (plus, minus, a little margin of tolerance (in global scale) )..

You say they hit
 but Bohr showed us
 from the very 1st
 in his younger year
 that contact
 is a virtual thing.

The atoms do NOT touch each other.

They (atoms) interact elastically
 at a distance
 with fields.

7 minutes ago, Sensei said:

They are called photons..

OK. That's a good place
 to start.

If you have a (single) photon
 with a wavelength
 of 21 cm,
 what does it look like?
Is it round like a ball?
How big is it really?
E.g. what is its diameter?
How do I co_relate its intensity
 to its (physical) size?
How much momentum
does it have?

 

20 minutes ago, Bufofrog said:

What is that supposed to mean?  Since you used e.g. which means 'for example', you are saying, "As far as I know water_waves travel [for example] at c."

Yes, water waves travel,
 they are travelling on or in a medium
 (called water);
 & the (traveling=propagation) speed
 of that medium
 is typically (the symbol) c
 (in the formula),
 which in that case (=example)
 is 2 m/s.

Although sound waves travel 1500 m/s in water
 (compared to 340 m/s in air).

So depending
 on what kind of wave,
 then c has different values.

20 minutes ago, Bufofrog said:

No water waves don't travel at c.

I'm sorry,
 but water waves (do) travel at c,
 & "that" value for c is 2 m/s.

20 minutes ago, Bufofrog said:

EM radiation and water waves are very different things.

Yes, I think so.

20 minutes ago, Bufofrog said:

  A water wave is a disturbance in a medium.  EM waves are not a disturbance in a medium, they are a disturbance in a field.

What is a field?

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9 minutes ago, Capiert said:

This (thread's) question
 is a real question
 expecting real answers.

As I said before, EM radiation and water waves are very different things.  A water wave is a disturbance in a medium.  Photons are not a disturbance in a medium, they are a disturbance in a field.

11 minutes ago, Capiert said:

If you have a (single) photon
 with a wavelength
 of 21 cm,
 what does it look like?

It doesn't look like anything, the question doesn't even make sense.

 

12 minutes ago, Capiert said:

Is it round like a ball?

No

14 minutes ago, Capiert said:

How big is it really?

Depends on what you mean by "really".

15 minutes ago, Capiert said:

E.g. what is its diameter?

It makes no sense to ask what it's diameter is.

16 minutes ago, Capiert said:

How do I co_relate its intensity
 to its (physical) size?

You don't.

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1 hour ago, Sensei said:
1 hour ago, Capiert said:

Can you please explain that
 to me?

A wave of(=on) what?

1 hour ago, Sensei said:

Wavelength is part of the photon energy equation E=hc/wavelength

That looks (a bit) like you are avoiding my question Sensei.
We KNOW we are dealing with a wave,
 thus it has a (pretty obvious) wave_"length".

But I did NOT ask that.

I asked what was the wave "on".
 

 

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1 hour ago, Sensei said:

Philosophy is a pseudoscience. Physics is a real science. Too often you ask philosophical questions.. ask physical questions, such as "how to measure the speed of something", "how to measure some physical quantity", etc., and you will get the right, truthful answers..

 

..one water molecule hits another molecule, which hits another molecule, and there is a momentum transfer between them in all directions, they hit something, while molecule remain at place (plus, minus, a little margin of tolerance (in global scale) )..

They are called photons..

 

Philosophy is not a pseudoscience.

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1 hour ago, Capiert said:

OK. That's a good place
 to start.

If you have a (single) photon
 with a wavelength
 of 21 cm,

It is relative. The one observer will detect it as 21 cm, the other might it detect as 42 cm (red shifted), the other might it detect as 10.5 cm (blue shifted). Actually any wavelength. Because in Special Relativity you have no absolute wavelengths..

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Redshift

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Redshift#Blueshift

 

1 hour ago, Capiert said:

what does it look like?

Is it round like a ball?

None a single particle has the shape..

 

1 hour ago, Capiert said:

E.g. what is its diameter?

Such questions have no sense..

Particle is detected if it interacts ("hits") the other particle. If it hits it, it transfers some physical quantity on the second particle. Therefore we know there was interaction..

 

The diameter of an atom can be "measured" because scientists use the flux of other particles toward the nucleus. If these are reflected, the "diameter" of the multi-particle entity, called the "nucleus," can be measured by the angles at which the initial particles were reflected.

It is called cross section.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cross_section_(physics)

The different isotopes have different cross sections.

 

"If a poacher shoots birds with a shotgun, he will eventually shoot any bird.."

 

26 minutes ago, Capiert said:

That looks (a bit) like you are avoiding my question Sensei.
We KNOW we are dealing with a wave,
 thus it has a (pretty obvious) wave_"length".

But I did NOT ask that.

I asked what was the wave "on".

 

The wavelength is a property of the particle. Its (kinetic) energy can be mentioned instead of wavelength and get the same results.. e.g. the beam of electrons in vacuum with kinetic energy of 100 keV has similar effects on the matter as beam of photons with 100 keV. e.g. electrons in the matter will be excited and/or ejected (with the exception that other physical quantities such as Lepton number, must be preserved, so electron gives its kinetic energy, and is not disappearing (is not absorbed) ).

Instead of saying "green photon" or "photon with a wavelength of 532 nm," you can say "photon with an energy of 2.33 eV." It's all the same.

Edited by Sensei
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40 minutes ago, Bufofrog said:

As I said before, EM radiation and water waves are very different things.  A water wave is a disturbance in a medium.  Photons are not a disturbance in a medium, they are a disturbance in a field.

I suspect I need
 a comparison
 of a field
 & a medium.

40 minutes ago, Bufofrog said:

It doesn't look like anything, the question doesn't even make sense.

Yes! (So) We (now) have something
 that looks like NOTHING.

But I suspect
 you are implying
 that photons
 are (particles)
 too small to see.

We would need
 a particle
 much smaller
 than a photon;
 & the vision apparatus
 for that smaller particle.

Basically, (then)
 I'm asking
 for (what is) the "shape"
 of a photon
 because
 (you claim)
 it is (suppose
 to be)
 a (real=physical) particle.

Otherwise
 "your" physics
 is (still) NOT making sense
 to me.

40 minutes ago, Bufofrog said:

No

 Well if the photon (particle)
 is NOT round;
 then what is its shape.

I'm NOT satisfied
 with pseudoscience.

Real particles
 have real dimensions.

They are NOT just imagination
 dreamt up
 by pseudo scientists.

Science is measurement;
 NOT (always) its theory (ideas).
I.e. Opinions from scientists.

40 minutes ago, Bufofrog said:

Depends on what you mean by "really".

I have a big gulf (gorge)
 between
 talking about
 a wave_"length"
 e.g. 21 cm
 versus
 something
 as small
 as an optical photon.

I have difficulty
 conceiving
 a real particle
 with the (conflicting) info (clues, hints given).

It does NOT make sense.

Thus I am requesting
 a (more) reasonable example.

40 minutes ago, Bufofrog said:

It makes no sense to ask what it's diameter is.

If that is because it is NOT round
 then please describe
 this real particle's shape.
I.e. Photon.

40 minutes ago, Bufofrog said:

You don't.

Naturally I have NOT co_related
 the photon's intensity
 to its size.

But why NOT?

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49 minutes ago, Capiert said:

Real particles
 have real dimensions.

Not so much. Fundamental particles are point-like. Physical size has little meaning in QM; it’s the interactions that matter.

 

EM radiation requires no medium; electric and magnetic fields can and do exist in a vacuum.

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41 minutes ago, Capiert said:

I suspect I need
 a comparison
 of a field
 & a medium.

Then you need some work to do don't you.

42 minutes ago, Capiert said:

But I suspect
 you are implying
 that photons
 are (particles)
 too small to see.

Nope not saying that at all.  Most anti-science trolls have some knowledge about science, I guess you are the outlier.

44 minutes ago, Capiert said:

I have a big gulf (gorge)
 between
 talking about
 a wave_"length"
 e.g. 21 cm
 versus
 something
 as small
 as an optical photon.

Yes, that is because you have not spent any time to learn anything.  Photons can have a wave length of a kilometer, so you must think those photons are 1 km in size?  Maybe this will help the wavelength has nothing to do with the 'size' of a photon.

49 minutes ago, Capiert said:

It does NOT make sense.

Well if you can't understand it then we must immediately change all of our theories!

52 minutes ago, Capiert said:

If that is because it is NOT round
 then please describe
 this real particle's shape.
I.e. Photon.

I think I already said that a photon doesn't look like anything.  It makes no sense to think a photon looks like something.

54 minutes ago, Capiert said:

Naturally I have NOT co_related
 the photon's intensity
 to its size.

But why NOT?

Because that is nonsense.

 

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2 hours ago, Capiert said:

Why do water_waves need a medium?

What is a water wave without the water?

In the case of an electromagnetic wave, without the medium, one still has the electromagnetic wave.

 

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An Electromagnetic Field is a value and direction ( vector ) associated with each point in space.
A Medium is a particle at each point in space, that has an oscillation as part of its motion.

A Photon is best described as a point ( dimensionless ) quantum particle that is 'smeared out' over a volume with no distinct edge.
But in its other model of a wave, an 'exact' value of its energy will make its wavelength infinitely long, so it is in no way related to its size.

You may have gathered, by now, that quantum objects don't act the same as macroscopic objects.
So, I ask, again, why do you think quantum particles, like photons, would need a medium like macroscopic objects, such as water waves, do ?  

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1 hour ago, John Cuthber said:

mean that it's impossible to define your speed with respect to a vacuum

If the vacuum  is filled with quantum foam (a big "if" ,as I don't understand what that means) could an object's speed/velocity be referred to different locations in that quantum foam?

Does the term "location" not apply ,perhaps wrt quantum foam?

Said in another way ,could  the quantum foam be considered to be  a medium?

Edited by geordief
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Quantum foam 'exists' ( ? ) at a scale where space-time becomes chaotic, and virtual particles b( the ones without a defined position or momentum )pop in and out of existence ( for an undefined time ).
How would you specify a position relative to it ?

You can consider anything a medium, but what is actually 'waving' ?

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