Not 100% sure on this, but I would suggest the wave length cannot be any smaller than the Planck length which is 10 to the minus 35th mtrs.Planck length is ~ 1.6x10^(-35) meters. Is this an effective minimum wavelength (therefore maximum energy) for photons?
Tepid guesswork is not a satisfactory answer and is best ignored. For starters, the very concept of 'photon wavelength' has no clear meaning in QED. There is a spatio-temporal spread i.e. wavepacket nature that depends on particular details of the generation process. Better to talk about photon energy, which is a well defined concept. Then, if limited to the case of the rest frame of a hot plasma (BB say!), it's believed there is a maximum temperature therefore maximum particle energy known as the Planck temperature:Planck length is ~ 1.6x10^(-35) meters. Is this an effective minimum wavelength (therefore maximum energy) for photons?
Because any photon near the planck-energy would have gravitational effects which are significant at the particle-physics level, current non-quantum gravitational theory cannot model phenomena reasonably. Therefore, we literally cannot answer such questions based on (unreliable) theory or (unevidenced) empirical observation.
Physics is simple when we can ignore that $$\frac{1}{c}, G, \hbar$$ are non-zero.
Ignore $$\frac{1}{c}$$ and you have Quantum Newtonian Gravity which has been tested in the lab with cold atoms.
Ignore $$G$$ and you have particle physics which has been tested in the lab with large machines.
Ignore $$\hbar$$ and you have General Relativity which has been tested in observations of the solar system and remote events, and most recently at LIGO.
But until we can deal with all three at once in a reliable way that had been vetted by empirical observation, we can't speak reliably on the behavior of particles near the planck energy.
Planck length is ~ 1.6x10^(-35) meters.
Is this an effective minimum wavelength (therefore maximum energy) for photons?
The concept of infinitesimal time interval ...
Well, thats the idea, to quantize the time..
You seem to be forgetting that the typical photon is an EM wave with hundred thousand or more cycles. Not much sense as I see it to be concerned with one wave length of it.... By limiting the minimum wavelength of photon to a finite value; its maximum frequency will also be limited. Its minimum time interval also will be limited. ...
Because any photon near the planck-energy would have gravitational effects which are significant at the particle-physics level, current non-quantum gravitational theory cannot model phenomena reasonably. Therefore, we literally cannot answer such questions based on (unreliable) theory or (unevidenced) empirical observation.
I don't see the logic there. Why should global cosmological models play a role in the reasonableness of discussion of Planck-scale physics when we have no local model for Planck-scale physics?Can you comment on my following musings.....
In an expanding universe that will expand forever any photon given enough time may have an arbitarilly small frequency and that in any infinite universe (which is certainly possible according to WMAP) a photon may have an arbitarilly large frequency. So speculation that the maximum frequency of a photon may be limited by the Planck scale is reasonable?.
OK, I think I get the picture.........I don't see the logic there. Why should global cosmological models play a role in the reasonableness of discussion of Planck-scale physics when we have no local model for Planck-scale physics?
You wish to challenge me on the logic and validity of anything presented in #3? It covered the two relevant limit cases.Because any photon near the planck-energy would have gravitational effects which are significant at the particle-physics level, current non-quantum gravitational theory cannot model phenomena reasonably. Therefore, we literally cannot answer such questions based on (unreliable) theory or (unevidenced) empirical observation.
Physics is simple when we can ignore that $$\frac{1}{c}, G, \hbar$$ are non-zero.
Ignore $$\frac{1}{c}$$ and you have Quantum Newtonian Gravity which has been tested in the lab with cold atoms.
Ignore $$G$$ and you have particle physics which has been tested in the lab with large machines.
Ignore $$\hbar$$ and you have General Relativity which has been tested in observations of the solar system and remote events, and most recently at LIGO.
But until we can deal with all three at once in a reliable way that had been vetted by empirical observation, we can't speak reliably on the behavior of particles near the planck energy.
You seem to be forgetting that the typical photon is an EM wave with hundred thousand or more cycles.
Not much sense as I see it to be concerned with one wave length of it.
You got it backwards; I can tell you're not an EE. That scenario would require a minimum frequency, not a maximum, it's a maximum wavelength you're thinking of (and there isn't any). Remember that wavelength is the inverse of frequency. This will help you get it right the next time!Can you comment on my following musings.....
In an expanding universe that will expand forever any photon given enough time may have an arbitarilly small frequency and that in any infinite universe (which is certainly possible according to WMAP) a photon may have an arbitarilly large frequency. So speculation that the maximum frequency of a photon may be limited by the Planck scale is reasonable?.
No, the Planck scale might limit the maximum frequency, and therefore the minimum wavelength. The Planck scale is very, very small.Can you comment on my following musings.....
In an expanding universe that will expand forever any photon given enough time may have an arbitarilly small frequency and that in any infinite universe (which is certainly possible according to WMAP) a photon may have an arbitarilly large frequency. So speculation that the maximum frequency of a photon may be limited by the Planck scale is reasonable?.
Off goes my head and on goes a pumpkin! That of course is what I did mean.No, the Planck scale might limit the maximum frequency, and therefore the minimum wavelength. The Planck scale is very, very small.
Sure. I kind of do that automatically; spotting what someone's been thinking when they wrote something (for me, a piece of code generally, sometimes a comment if they're not an arrogant #%$& who don't need no stinkin' comments) is something I'm usually fairly good at.Off goes my head and on goes a pumpkin! That of course is what I did mean.
Thanks for tidying it up.![]()
Limited; but why is the wavelength, which often is less than 1/1,000,000 of the photon's length, limited? The fact that man does not have an adequated theoretical understanding of very small (Planck) lengths, does NOT means nature is equally ignorant - can not make photons with shorter wave lengths.... One photon wavelength x Frequency of the photon( or cycles as you say) = Speed of light or photon, which is c and is constant. So, by limiting the photon's wavelength, its frequency will be limited or not?