I don't quite follow the logic.So matter is just a color of light as well.
regards
Zelta
"Science is organized knowledge. Wisdom is organized life"
"Happiness is not an ideal of reason, but of imagination."
Immanuel Kant
One scientist's image of a photon, with the emphasis on the particle, in space.
And another interpretation by a different person.
Electromagnetic field intensity for a photon dot with a/d = 0.5
Another different source.
Incoming yellow photon:
Photon absorption for 800 MeV photon energy¶
- The movie has been produced with 10 parallel ensembles using the method of perturbative particles for the FSI description
- Note that the incoming photon is just drawn by hand to show the beam axis. The real simulation starts, as soon as the photon has been absorbed.
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Color encoding¶
protons : blue
neutrons: red
non-exotic baryon resonances : yellow
exotic baryon resonances : white with blue/violet stripes
pions : green
exotic mesons : white red stripes
Would the same scientist agree to the hypothesis that a photon has a topological genus of 2??? That is to say it has two holes.Originally Posted by profpat
Time independence: [∂E(g)]²=[∂F(a)×∂r(a)]·[∂F(b)×∂r(b)] and Mass independence: ¶a(t)·¶r(t)=c²
The "Iconic Image" of entangled photons
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featured in Physics World, November 2002
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In quantum mechanics, the behavior of an electron in an atom is described by an orbital, which is a probability distribution rather than an orbit. In the figure, the shading at a point indicates the relative probability of the particle in the lowest-energy orbital being at that point.
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