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06-20-07, 09:37 AM #1Registered Senior Member
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Is there any limit to how small things can be?
I know scientists like to think there is a limit to how small things can be, but they have never identified such a limit. Although the very existence of defined objects seems to imply a limit - otherwise, how can they be defined? Nevertheless, how can there be a limit in a universe with so many seeminly infinite qualities, e.g. time and numbers?
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06-20-07, 09:45 AM #2
Surely you could never produce anything that is made from components smaller than an atom.
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06-20-07, 09:48 AM #3
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06-20-07, 09:49 AM #4Registered Senior Member
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Light is an object in a sense, and is not made of atoms. Besides, I didn't literally mean make some sort of household object. I meant the quality of contrast, i.e. the difference that separates things so that we can claim they exist.
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06-20-07, 09:53 AM #5Registered Senior Member
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A photon may be a discrete particle, but it is not indivisible - otherwise light could not travel across the universe without spreading itself out to thin.
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06-20-07, 09:53 AM #6
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06-20-07, 09:53 AM #7
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06-20-07, 09:55 AM #8Registered Senior Member
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Why don't you just tell me what Planck has to say?
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06-20-07, 09:55 AM #9
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06-20-07, 09:56 AM #10
The Planck length, denoted by , is the unit of length approximately 1.6 × 10−35 metres or about 10-20 times the size of a proton. It is in the system of units known as Planck units. The Planck length is deemed "natural" because it can be defined from three fundamental physical constants: the speed of light, Planck's constant, and the gravitational constant.
From Wiki.
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06-20-07, 09:57 AM #11Registered Senior Member
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A photon is a particle and a wave. You can't split the particle, but you can divide the wave.
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06-20-07, 09:58 AM #12
What do you mean 'discrete partical' I haven't heard of this before?
Also, it is very hard to see why or how something subatomic could be produced the quantam laws are not well understood. If this could happen I would imagine this would be in the very distant future.
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06-20-07, 09:58 AM #13
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06-20-07, 09:59 AM #14Registered Senior Member
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Thanks. Obviously, if a proton is smaller than the Planck length, then the Planck length is not the smallest indivisible unit.
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06-20-07, 10:00 AM #15
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06-20-07, 10:02 AM #16
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06-20-07, 10:03 AM #17Registered Senior Member
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Good question. How can the photon as a particle yet be divided as a wave? Makes me think a photon can be divided.
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06-20-07, 10:07 AM #18From http://www.hep.ucl.ac.uk/~jmb/Teachi...-2005/aqsa.pdfAs the invariant mass of the quark –antiquark pair produced by the photon ...
If a photon breaks down into a quark and an anti-quark then it can't be bigger.
The paper is also full of the little phrase (and TITLE) "photon remnants" - the photon is not the smallest thing there is.
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06-20-07, 10:10 AM #19
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06-20-07, 10:11 AM #20

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