ChatterBank0 min ago
photons
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Better tell these guys
http://hep-proj-photon2001.web.cern.ch/hep-proj-photon2001/
They held their 14th Anual workshop on photon-photon collisions 4 years ago!
OK Clanad (Mr. D. Advocate here), if the light photons are wave packets like the ripples on a pond etc., why do we see light from distant stars? Waves in space? When space is largely a vacuum so nothing there to transmit the waves. We don't see ripples in the pond when the water has gone! That is, ripples in the emptiness where the water used to be. Throw a stone into the empty pond; go on. Look! no splash. Not a single ripple.
Maybe those eggheads have been meeting for 14 years to figure out where their ripples went.
Having said all that, full understanding of why light (and other electromagnetic phenomena) travels through empty space at a constant speed has not been achieved, thus far...
First of all, photons (as with all other particles) can be both particles and waves at the same time; its just two different ways of interpreting the same thing. In fact, particles don't strictly exist, as they are mathematically objects with no size.
Photons travel from the sun to us because they can be interpreted as being waves, and have two components: the electromagnetic component and the magnetic component. It can be shown quite easily that the magnetic part creates the electric part, which in turn creates the magnetic part, ad infinitum. It kind of hop-skips its way here.
Photons travel (in vacuum) at constant speed (the speed of light), because they are massless.
Electromagnetic wave propagation, Java applet here.