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On Jun 2, 6:39*am, K1TTT wrote:
On Jun 2, 10:33*am, Keith Dysart wrote: On Jun 1, 11:31*pm, Cecil Moore wrote: "... All of the photon energy present in these waves must I suggest that you immediately dump any reference that includes a phrase like "photon energy present in a wave". There is a wave theory of light, and there is a particle theory of light, and these two theories do not play well together. While in many situations they will yield the same answers, it is not permissible to mix the concepts from each. Distrust the conclusions of any exposition which does so. ...Keith agreed. *photons are good when working with other elementary particle interactions to represent the em energy lost or transferred during particle interactions. *they are not that useful when studying wave propagation or interaction with macroscopic object... including 1/4 wave coatings. For those who may be interested, Richard Feynman offers an introductory lecture on photons he http://vega.org.uk/video/subseries/8 It illustrates that attempting to compute 1/4 wave coating behaviour with photons would be extremely tedious, though possible. On the other hand, at low light levels, where individual photons become discrete events, the wave theory becomes completely inadequate. Fortunately, for practical applications, power levels are much higher than this and the wave aproach is quite useful. ....Keith |
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