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This is known in physics that photons travel only at fixed speed $\mathrm{c}$ in vacuum but also inside a medium going from one atom to the next and taking advantage of the vacuum that exists between atoms in a material medium.

Any other speed lower than $c$ and the photons would cease to exist and get "destroyed".

Why is that?

This question is fundamental and I have a hard time to derive an analysis or physical explanation.

Why a photon is possible only at $\mathrm{c}$ propagation speed independent if there is a medium or not?

There must a deeper connection to vacuum spacetime.

Lagrangian
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Markoul11
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2 Answers2

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Photons are part of the elementary particles in the standard model of particle physics, which is modeled with quantum field theory (QFT). The model describes successfully the plethora of data in elementary particles and astrophysical observations and is also very predictive. In this QFT all zero mass particles travel with velocity c, because it is a result of Lorentz covariance of the theory. As the theory fits the data , it is a rule when discussing zero mass particles that they go with velocity c.

It is not a matter of "being destroyed", but of not being able to be created with non-zero mass .

anna v
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The property of the photon moving with speed of light can be derived through the relationship between the Lagrangian and the Hamiltonian of a free particle (with mass or without mass):

$$ H = p\cdot \dot{q} -\cal{L} \equiv p\cdot v -\cal{L}$$

where $v$ is the velocity as time derivative of the canonical coordinate $q$ of the free particle. $p$ is the momentum of the free particle.

Now in relativistic mechanics the Lagrangian of the free particle is

$$\cal{L} = const \int ds $$

the constant term const is only necessary to keep up with the units and $ds$ is the invariant line element:

$$ds = \sqrt{c^2dt^2 -dx^2 -dy^2 -dz^2}$$

So for photons the line element ds vanishes: $ds=0$, so the Lagrangian is zero. So the Hamiltonian is simply:

$$H = p\cdot v$$

Furthermore we know from relativistic mechanics that the energy of a free particle is :

$$ E =\sqrt{ (pc)^2 + m^2 c^4}$$

For a massless photon m=0 we get:

$$E =p\cdot c$$

Knowing that the Hamiltonian of a particle corresponds to its energy we get:

$$p\cdot v = H \equiv E = pc$$

which finally provides us with the answer: $v =c$.

The main reason why photons move with speed of light is that they are massless $m=0$.

But one could also just "define" photons as free particles (possibly adding another property to distinguish them from other massless particles -- gravitons for instance) whose line element is zero --- since this property is essential for the proof.

Lagrangian
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