TheoryOfSomething

TheoryOfSomething t1_j8i3q57 wrote

I believe that the phenomenon known as "photon bunching" could also be described as an exchange interaction (along with the associated anti-bunching effect for fermions). If you consider two points, a and b, in some source that is emitting photons and you set up 2 detectors, A and B, to detect those photons, then for photons (and all bosons) you will see an increase in the probability of simultaneous detection at A&B compared to distinguishable particles and a decrease of simultaneous detection for Fermions: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hanbury_Brown_and_Twiss_effect

Because photons are non-interacting at the tree-diagram level (that is to say that in the Hamiltonian Lagrangian for QED there is no photon-photon interaction term), this does not lead to the same energy consequences as it does for electrons or alpha particles. Both the Coulomb integral and the exchange integral are proportional to the interaction term in the Hamiltonian, except that for photons there is no interaction term! Metaphorically speaking (because there are technical problems with assigning a wavefunction to single photons), the product basis remains the diagonal basis. As a result, you see interference effects that cause the bunching behavior mentioned earlier, but not the same consequences for energy or spin correlation as with electrons.

A careful reader may object at this point and say, "Ah! But you have neglected the higher-order QED effects. Sure, at tree-level there is no photon-photon interaction, but what about the scattering mediated by virtual electron-positron pains? Surely that gives rise to some interaction which turns out to be either attractive or repulsive." And the careful read is almost correct, almost. There is very weak (starting at 4th order) photon-photon interaction and photon-photon scattering in QED, but it turns out that the effective potential that this interaction gives rise to has zero range (one might describe it as "a delta function" although there are technical problems with making this formulation precise in >1 spatial dimension; a complication that comes up repeatedly in my PhD thesis in the context of ultracold atomic physics) and therefore cannot really be described as attractive or repulsive. To expand, to first order in perturbation theory the interaction terms is quartic in the E and B fields, and if you work out what kind of potential it takes to create that you get an operator proportional to a delta function. Of course this is just the effect at first order, the effects at all higher orders will also give rise to interactions that look like they are "zero range", although if it were possible to do the full resummation and go beyond all orders, you might get a spatially-extended potential. I can't think of any reason that that potential should be always attractive or always repulsive, but who knows. Experimentally speaking, attraction/repulsion between beams of photons has not been observed or measured without coupling them to some massive interacting medium.

In the case of photons, there is a purely classical explanation for all of this. Essentially, because the classical limit of a multi-particle system of photons is not a system of interacting distinguishable particles but rather an electromagnetic wave (a coherent state superposition of all numbers of photons with a well-defined average number of photons and phase), you can do the math and arrive at correct predictions purely from considering the classical problem of detecting the signal from a spatially extended EM source with 2 nearby detectors.

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TheoryOfSomething t1_j5qmn7j wrote

Reply to comment by KenKaniff- in Why does hot air cool? by AspGuy25

I know you were probably not trying to be completely rigorous in your answer, but I would add an important qualifier to the gist of your answer. All other things being equal (AKA ceterus paribus), heat will always flow from the hot thing to the cold thing.

Heat can and sometimes without (human) intervention does flow from a cold thing to a hot thing, but it requires some other change. That change could be doing work on the system ala refrigeration. The change could be that a chemical potential gradient is causing a certain type of particle to move preferentially from a cold region to a hot one which leaves the cold region even colder (something like this is the principle behind Helium dilution refrigerators). I'm sure there are other example, although I can't think of more off the top of my head.

So to be more general we might say that closed systems tend toward maximum entropy (or equivalently minimum grand thermodynamic potential), which usually means heat flows from hot to cold, and all else being equal guarantees that heat will flow from hot to cold.

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