Questions tagged [electromagnetic-radiation]

Propagating solutions to Maxwell’s equations in classical electromagnetism and real photons in quantum electrodynamics. A superset of thermal-radiation.

When to Use this Tag

Use this tag to discuss electromagnetic waves. Since these arise either from or , you might want to include either of these two tags as well. For high-energy physics, look at . For electromagnetic waves originating from a black body, instead use ; the photo-electric effect also has its own tag .

Introduction

The defining property of an electromagnetic wave is its frequency $\nu$, which is related to the wavelength $\lambda$ of the wave by $c = \lambda \nu$. The electromagnetic wave propagates with the speed of light $c = \sqrt{\varepsilon_0 \mu_0 \varepsilon_r \mu_r}^{-1}$, where $\mu_r$ and $\varepsilon_r$ are material-dependent constants. The SI system defined $c_{\textrm{Vacuum}} \equiv 299\;792.458\textrm{ km/h}$. Visible light has a wavelength of $400\textrm{ nm} \lesssim \lambda \lesssim 800\textrm{ nm}$ in vacuum.

There are two main descriptions of electromagnetic waves: Classically, they can be described as propagating solutions to , that is, ‘normal‘ electromagnetic fields that change in time and position according to the electromagnetic wave equations.

However, the photoelectric effect can only be explained by quantised electromagnetic waves; waves that consist of particles carrying the energy of the wave. These particles are called photons, are massless and move at the speed of light. However, due to the energy of the electromagnetic field carried by them, a single photon has a non-zero momentum $p = h / \lambda$ and non-zero energy $E = h \nu$, with $h$ being Planck’s constant.

It is often convenient to define the angular frequency $\omega \equiv 2 \pi \nu$, the wave-number $k \equiv 2 \pi / \lambda$ and the reduced Planck’s constant $\hbar \equiv h / (2 \pi)$. We then have $p = \hbar k$ and $E = \hbar \omega$.

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What is Chirped Pulse Amplification, and why is it important enough to warrant a Nobel Prize?

The 2018 Nobel Prize in Physics was awarded recently, with half going to Arthur Ashkin for his work on optical tweezers and half going to Gérard Mourou and Donna Strickland for developing a technique called "Chirped Pulse Amplification". In general,…
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If photons have no mass, how can they have momentum?

As an explanation of why a large gravitational field (such as a black hole) can bend light, I have heard that light has momentum. This is given as a solution to the problem of only massive objects being affected by gravity. However, momentum is the…
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Why does NASA use gold foil on equipment and gold-coated visors?

I've read several websites about equipment covered with gold foil and astronaut helmet visors are coated with gold. However, their explanations are devoid of almost all physics content. Can someone explain the basic concept of why gold foil is so…
Smith
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What is an "attosecond pulse", and what can you use it for?

The 2023 Nobel Prize in Physics was announced today, and it was awarded to Pierre Agostini, Ferenc Krausz and Anne L’Huillier, for “experimental methods that generate attosecond pulses of light for the study of electron dynamics in matter”. The…
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Why does a remote car key work when held to your head/body?

I was trying to unlock my car with a keyfob, but I was out of range. A friend of mine said that I have to hold the transmitter next to my head. It worked, so I tried the following later that day: Walked away from the car until I was out of…
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If you view the Earth from far enough away can you observe its past?

From my understanding of light, you are always looking into the past based on how much time it takes the light to reach you from what you are observing. For example when you see a star burn out, if the star was 5 light years away then the star…
JD Isaacks
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How many photons are received per bit transmitted from Voyager 1?

As of 2024, according to https://voyager.jpl.nasa.gov/ , Voyager 1 is around one light·day away from Earth and still in radio contact. When Voyager 1 sends messages to Earth, roughly how many photons are (1) transmitted and (2) received per bit?
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What is the relation between electromagnetic wave and photon?

At the end of this nice video (https://youtu.be/XiHVe8U5PhU?t=10m27s), she says that electromagnetic wave is a chain reaction of electric and magnetic fields creating each other so the chain of wave moves forward. I wonder where the photon is in…
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Why is glass transparent?

Once I asked this question from my teacher and he replied "Because it passes light.". "And why does it pass light?" I asked and he said, "Because it is transparent.". The same question again, Why glass is transparent? Why does light pass through it,…
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How and why do accelerating charges radiate electromagnetic radiation?

Let's consider it case by case: Case 1: Charged particle is at rest. It has an electric field around it. No problem. That is its property. Case 2: Charged particle started moving (it's accelerating). We were told that it starts radiating EM…
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Can photons be detected without being absorbed?

I am thinking about a detector that would beep if light passes through it. Is it possible?
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Why is light called an 'electromagnetic wave' if it's neither electric nor magnetic?

How can light be called electromagnetic if it doesn't appear to be electric nor magnetic? If I go out to the sunlight, magnets aren't affected (or don't seem to be). And there is no transfer of electric charge/electrons (as there is in AC/DC…
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Does a charged particle accelerating in a gravitational field radiate?

A charged particle undergoing an acceleration radiates photons. Let's consider a charge in a freely falling frame of reference. In such a frame, the local gravitational field is necessarily zero, and the particle does not accelerate or experience…
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Why doesn't the motion of a car affect the frequency of radio stations?

When we go in a car and tune to an FM radio station, why doesn't our motion disturb the frequency? Like the Doppler effect?
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If visible light has more energy than microwaves, why isn't visible light dangerous?

Light waves are a type of electromagnetic wave and they fall between 400-700 nm long. Microwaves are less energetic but seem to be more dangerous than visible light. Is visible light dangerous at all and why not?
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