Repulsion between two electrons

S

~~SciGirl~~

Guest
Ok, say there are 2 electrons, repelling each other.
There are photons between them, and the repulsion is caused by the photon's
"kick", right?
\ /
\ e- / e-
\ ??? /
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
/ \
/ e- \ e-
/ \

So that's the basic Feynman diagram, missing some parts and labels but as
much as I can do on the computer I think.

My question: what frequency is the photon that causes the repulsion?
According to uncertainty, it should change depending on how close to each
other the electrons are, right??? So if they were far enough away, it would
be maybe the wavelength of a radio wave, and if they were really close
together, an x-ray? And if so, if we put them the right distance away from
each other, could we get visible light?

---------- That was the first part ------------

Now the second part. Say there's an electron and a positron attracting each
other. (I'm not going to make the diagram for that, it's too hard with just
the slash marks and stuff). How do the two particles attract? Some opposite
of "kick"? And could we vary the frequency of the photons there too?

***Before you criticize someone, walk a mile in their shoes. That way,
you'll be a mile away and you'll have their shoes***
Sci~Girl the Obsessive
 
On Thu, 19 May 2005 22:45:48 +0000, ~~SciGirl~~ wrote:

Ok, say there are 2 electrons, repelling each other.
There are photons between them, and the repulsion is caused by the photon's
"kick", right?
No. There is only a force between the two electrons. When they _move_,
it's the force times the motion that "causes" a photon. I've modified
your diagram a bit here:

\ /
e- \ electromotive / e-
\ force /
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
/ \
/ e- \ e-
/ \
A photon is the medium of energy exchange. When they're just sitting
there, there is force, but no motion, so no energy is transferred.
Another word for this force is "voltage". It's simply pressure, that
isn't doing anything yet.

So that's the basic Feynman diagram, missing some parts and labels but as
much as I can do on the computer I think.
Close enough, if I understand what you're asking, not that I know what
a "Feynman diagram" is. I guess I could look it up, but I think it would
only confuse the issue - oh, all right....
Oh! You've got electrons moving, and "bouncing off" each other. I
thought your diagram was just two electrons sitting there. So I was
the one who was confused. but I'm too lazy to start over, so I'll just
correct myself as I go along.

So, yes, when moving electrons bounce off each other, there is
acceleration. There's motion, the electron's motion, and there's
force, which is the repulsive force (EMF in my modified _stationary_
diagram above), and force * motion = work, which is very much like
energy.

So the frequency (wavelength) of the photon depends on how fast
the electrons are moving, and how close they get - how energetic the
collision is.

My question: what frequency is the photon that causes the repulsion?
That depends on the amount of energy moved from one place to the other.

According to uncertainty, it should change depending on how close to each
other the electrons are, right??? So if they were far enough away, it would
be maybe the wavelength of a radio wave, and if they were really close
together, an x-ray? And if so, if we put them the right distance away from
each other, could we get visible light?
When an electron moves a large distance but not with a lot of force, that
will create a long photon, like from an antenna. When it moves a very
short distance, but with huge amounts of force, then you get X-rays,
like off the anode of an X-ray tube.

And yes, in between, there's visible light - I'm pretty sure that's
how an xcimer laser works. There's also synchrotron radiation, which
is what you get from electrons that are moving along a curved path -
the combination of their charge, and the acceleration results in
work, or energy, which escapes as photons.

---------- That was the first part ------------

Now the second part. Say there's an electron and a positron attracting each
other. (I'm not going to make the diagram for that, it's too hard with just
the slash marks and stuff). How do the two particles attract?
Again, it's simply electromotive force, the same way a balloon can stick
to your hair. But their movement, in combination with that force, will
release energy. ---- OK, first time through, I was seeing them just
sitting there attracting each other. But an electron and positron won't
bounce off each other - depending on how close to head-on they come,
they'll either swing around in hyperbolic orbits, and the acceleration
releases a photon, or if they're dead-on, they'll annihilate.

ome opposite
of "kick"? And could we vary the frequency of the photons there too?
When the electron and positron actually do crash together, they're
completely turned into a photon - that's a gamma ray. If they just
swing around each other, it depends on how fast and how close they
get.

Hope This Helps!
Rich
 
~~SciGirl~~ wrote:
Ok, say there are 2 electrons, repelling each other.
There are photons between them, and the repulsion is caused by the photon's
"kick", right?
\ /
\ e- / e-
\ ??? /
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
/ \
/ e- \ e-
/ \

So that's the basic Feynman diagram, missing some parts and labels but as
much as I can do on the computer I think.
Except you're taking it literally by assuming that it's a point
event because that's what the diagram seems to show. It isn't,
because the diagram is an extremely simplified form of shorthand
notation for a fairly complicated process.

My question: what frequency is the photon that causes the repulsion?
According to uncertainty, it should change depending on how close to each
other the electrons are, right??? So if they were far enough away, it would
be maybe the wavelength of a radio wave, and if they were really close
together, an x-ray? And if so, if we put them the right distance away from
each other, could we get visible light?
The electromagnetic force extends to infinity, so the electrons
are continually exchanging photons no matter how far apart they are.
There's no specific frequency to nail down unless the electrons are
bound into physical matter as opposed to being in vacuum. In matter,
the presence of the fields associated with other charges places
restrictions on the frequencies of the photons they can exchange.
"Bound" can also mean being within a cavity resonator like a magnetron.

---------- That was the first part ------------

Now the second part. Say there's an electron and a positron attracting each
other. (I'm not going to make the diagram for that, it's too hard with just
the slash marks and stuff). How do the two particles attract? Some opposite
of "kick"? And could we vary the frequency of the photons there too?
In vacuum, similar to above except the force is attractive.

Until somebody finds/invents Dilithium, we don't really have to
worry about the bound condition. The cavity situation is exemplified
in particle/antiparticle colliders.

You really ought to post questions like this in
sci.physics.electromag, you know.

Mark L. Fergerson
 
~~SciGirl~~ wrote:

Ok, say there are 2 electrons, repelling each other.
There are photons between them, and the repulsion is caused by the photon's
"kick", right?
The photons are "virtual" photons. Lookup "solitons" and "dark solitons"
for insight.

You may find this helpful:
http://www.dualspace.net
http://www.dualspace.net/uploads/diracpairs.pdf

Scott

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