Welcome to the Industrial Automation website!

NameDescriptionContent
XING-Automation
E-mail  
Password  
  
Forgot password?
  Register
当前位置:

What are the properties of photons and electrons? What the hell do they have to do with each other?

F: | Au:佚名 | DA:2023-12-02 | 933 Br: | 🔊 点击朗读正文 ❚❚ | Share:

On the road to popular science, you will inevitably encounter microscopic particles such as photons and electrons, and the two are perhaps the most common microscopic particles. Photons are everywhere around us, and electrons are the indispensable structural components of atoms, and everything is composed of atoms, and it is inevitable to figure out the nature of photons and electrons.

Photon and electron are the most basic microscopic particles, they are inseparable, so what is the photon and electron, what is the relationship between the two?

We often hear that photons and electrons can be converted into each other. In fact, this statement is not precise and easily misleading.

First, photons and electrons are both very small, with the electron being the second smallest of the microscopic particles, only larger than the neutrino. We can't see electrons, we can't see individual photons of course, we can only see light, to put it simply, photons are carriers of energy, or light is actually energy.

Let's analyze what the characteristics of photons and electrons are, and what the relationship between the two is.

Is photon a particle or a wave? In the course of the development of modern physics has been very controversial, at the beginning of scientists generally believed that light is a wave. But Einstein's discovery of the photoelectric effect showed us that light is also a particle, so light has wave-particle duality.

From the point of view of quantum mechanics, because the energy is discontinuous, the photon is actually a part of the energy, and the photon is short for "light quantum". Although the photon has the characteristics of a particle, strictly speaking, it is not a specific particle like an electron, but more like a "gluon" that propagates the basic force, and is a propagator of the electromagnetic force.

At present, the general conclusion of scientists is that the photon is massless (rest mass), or the rest mass of the photon is zero, and the photon is born at the speed of light, without any acceleration process. Although photons have no static mass, they have "dynamic mass" because Einstein's theory of relativity suggests that energy and mass are the same thing.

It needs to be explained here that the speed of light we often talk about does not actually refer to the speed of photons, of course, the speed of light in relativity is not the speed of photons, the speed of light c is a constant, is the inherent nature of space-time, only related to the permeability and dielectric constant of vacuum. Specifically, the speed of light is the speed of gravitational waves (the speed of space-time ripples), an inherent property of four-dimensional space-time.

The electron is very different from the photon. The electron is a concrete particle that exists objectively, a particle of basic matter.

As we all know, an atom consists of a nucleus and electrons, and the electrons move around the nucleus at high speed (in the form of random clouds of electrons). Electrons are indivisible elementary particles, at least for now.

Many people think of the atomic structure as a macroscopic structure like the solar system, with electrons orbiting the nucleus and eight planets orbiting the sun, which look very similar. But that's not the case. There's a fundamental difference.

Let's take the simplest atom, the hydrogen atom. A hydrogen atom consists of a proton and an electron, and the electron orbits the proton under electrostatic gravity. However, it should be noted that the trajectory of the electron is not elliptical or circular like the Earth's orbit around the sun, and the trajectory of the electron is random, randomly appearing around the proton, which is the so-called "electron cloud".

For more complex atoms, the region in which an electron appears depends on the energy level in which the electron resides. According to the Pauli exclusion principle, a single electron orbital can only hold a maximum of two electrons, and the two electrons must spin in opposite directions.

Why don't electrons go around the sun like the eight planets in our solar system and they go around the nucleus in a regular way, but they come around the nucleus in a very random way?

That's a good question.

The reason is not complicated. Electrons are constantly absorbing and releasing energy, never stopping. The electron mass is very small, about 9.109×10⁻³¹ kg. Although the mass is very small, when the electron travels at high speed outside the nucleus, the electric field deflects and releases energy, which is radiated in the form of photons. When you radiate energy, the electron has less energy, and the orbital is lowered closer to the ground state.

Conversely, if the electron absorbs energy (photons), the electron's orbit will transition to a higher energy level, from the ground state to the excited state. If the more energy is absorbed, the further out the orbital will be, and at some point the electron will be completely unbound from the nucleus and become a free electron.

So that's the connection and the difference between electrons and photons.

  • Basler KR7FFX Static Regulator 840V
  • Basler EL200-7 Voltage Regulator 90-660VAC 7A
  • Basler PRP210-1 Reverse Power Relay 9056300102
  • Basler SSR 63-12 Static Regulator 600VAC
  • Basler 9289901106 Digital Board
  • Basler DECS100 Voltage Regulator DECS100A01
  • Basler Electric CEM-2020 Contact Expansion Module
  • Basler Electric BE3-25-1 C1 N4 Synchronizing Check Relay
  • Basler Electric ACA2000-50GM GigE Camera 2MP 50fps
  • Basler Electric ACA2240-20GMSYM GigE Camera Sony IMX264
  • Basler BE1-50G Ground Overcurrent Relay
  • Basler PRS250 Veri-Sync Relay
  • Basler MOC2199 Output Module
  • Basler UFOV 260A Underfrequency Overvoltage Module
  • Basler BE-15482-001 Control Module
  • Basler LSP4-7 Protective Relay
  • Basler SCP 250-G-60 VAR Power Factor Controller
  • Basler BE146N Negative Sequence Overcurrent Relay
  • Basler APR63-5 Automatic Voltage Regulator
  • Basler 9507900107 SR8A Retrofit Voltage Regulator
  • Basler BE1-320 Directional Power Relay
  • Basler KR7F Voltage Regulator 9116200100
  • Basler UFOV 260A Overvoltage Protective Module
  • Basler AEC63-7 Analog Excitation Controller
  • Basler 9992D90G01 Control Module
  • Basler 6966D22G01 Control Board
  • Basler 6965D40G01 Control Board
  • Basler BE1-50/51M-104 Overcurrent Relay
  • Basler BE1-BPR Programmable Breaker Relay
  • BASLER Electric SSR 125-9 1256 00 102 Static Voltage Regulator
  • Basler Electric MVC 112 Manual Voltage Control
  • Basler Electric 9321000102 Control Module
  • Basler Electric RA-70-MDCT7 Rectifier Assembly
  • Basler Electric ACA1300-60GM GigE Camera
  • Basler Electric 6427C85G01 Interface Board
  • Basler Electric 6965D05G01 Control Board
  • Basler Electric ACA2500-14UC Current Transducer
  • Basler Electric 9170206111 Protective Relay
  • Basler Electric BE1-11-G6D1M1J1P0E000 Protection Relay
  • Basler Electric BE1-50/51B-107 Overcurrent Relay
  • Basler 9121000106 Voltage Controller
  • Basler B3E-E1P-A0N0F Solid State Protective Relay
  • Basler 9121000106 Manual Voltage Control
  • Basler PRP320 Motor Pull-out Relay
  • Basler SSE-N 250-9KW Shunt Exciter Regulator
  • Basler BE1-50-51B-107 Overcurrent Relay
  • BASLER ELECTRIC MVC 108 MANUAL VOLTAGE CONTROL MODULE 9 0370 00 102
  • Basler BE1-59N-A7E-D1J-D0N0F Ground Overvoltage Relay
  • Basler BE1-46N-G1E-B8P-B0N0F Negative Sequence Overcurrent Relay
  • Basler BE1-951 Overcurrent Protection System
  • Basler Electric MOC2199 Motor Operated Potentiometer
  • Basler Electric BE1-60 Voltage Balance Solid State Relay B1FA1C1M1F
  • Basler Electric BE1-67N Directional Overcurrent Relay
  • Basler Electric PIA2400-17GM Interface Module
  • Basler Electric V6RAB Rectifier Module
  • Basler Electric BE1-32R Reverse Power Relay B2E E1R A0N1F
  • Basler Electric IFM-150 Firing Circuit Chassis 120V AC
  • Basler Electric IFM-102 Firing Circuit Chassis 120V AC
  • Basler Electric 9170206111 NSNP Control Module
  • Basler Electric SSR 63-12 Static Voltage Regulator
  • Basler UFOV 260A Overvoltage Protective Module
  • Basler SCA1300-32GM CCD Camera Lens Enclosure
  • Basler BA1-27 Under Voltage Relay
  • Basler 149D866G06 Control Board
  • Basler 9072300130 Power Supply Module
  • Basler CBS 305 Current Boost System
  • Basler BE1-60 Voltage Balance Relay
  • Basler Electric CBS 212 Current Boost System Sensing 120/240VAC 50/60Hz 10VA
  • Basler MVC-300 Manual Voltage Control Unit
  • Basler SSR125-12 Static Voltage Regulator 918500102
  • Basler SR32A2B05B3E Static Voltage Regulator
  • Basler Electric BE1-59N Ground Fault Overvoltage Relay
  • Basler Electric 9110000113 Excitation Module
  • Basler Electric 90-72300-114 Control Accessory
  • Basler Electric PRS-250 Protection Relay System
  • Basler Electric BE1-50/51M-109 Overcurrent Relay
  • Basler Electric SR4A1B10B3E Static Voltage Regulator
  • Basler Electric CBS 212 Current Boost System
  • Basler Electric SR32A2B05B3E Static Voltage Regulator
  • Basler Electric MOC2207 Motor Operated Potentiometer
  • Basler Electric SR4A1B05A3E Static Voltage Regulator
  • Basler Electric BE1-32R Power Relay B2EE1PA0N1F
  • Basler BEI-81 Underfrequency Relay
  • Basler CBS 212A Current Boost System
  • Basler SSR 63-12 Static Voltage Regulator
  • Basler DGC-2020 Digital Genset Controller
  • Basler BE1-32 Reverse Power Relay
  • Basler BE1-50/51B-207 Overcurrent Relay
  • Basler BE1-951 Overcurrent Protection System
  • Basler 9073800-103 Power Supply
  • Basler SCA1300-32FC CCD Camera
  • Basler 9073800-103 Power Supply
  • Basler SCA1300-32FC CCD Camera
  • Basler L304KC Protective Relay
  • Basler BE3-25-1S1N4 Time Overcurrent Relay
  • Basler 9032300113 Excitation Support System
  • Basler BE1-59N Ground Overvoltage Relay
  • Basler MVC-300 Manual Voltage Control Unit
  • Basler MOC2102 Potentiometer
  • Basler BE1-87G Generator Differential Relay
  • Basler Electric DECS-200 Digital Excitation Control System
  • Basler Electric DECS 125-15-B2C5 Digital Excitation System
  • Basler Electric PLA2400-12GM Power Supply
  • Basler Electric BE1-50/51B-235 Overcurrent Relay
  • Basler Electric BE1-27/59 Undervoltage Overvoltage Relay
  • Basler Electric CEM-2020 Contact Expansion Module
  • Basler Electric BE1-32R Solid State Power Relay
  • Basler Electric BE1-700 Digital Generator Management Relay
  • Basler Electric BE1-59N Ground Fault Overvoltage Relay
  • Basler Electric BE10493002 Protection Module
  • Basler Electric BEI-79A1AA5CA3M1F Digital Annunciator
  • Basler Electric SSR 32-12 Static Voltage Regulator
  • Basler Electric BE1-CDS240 Current Differential System
  • Basler Electric BE1-67 Directional Overcurrent Relay
  • Basler Electric 9121000106 DECS-100 Voltage Controller
  • Basler Electric BEI-871 Interface Module
  • Basler Electric 8650C72 Exciter Control Module
  • Basler Electric RDP-110-S1 Generator Annunciator
  • Basler Electric BE1-32O/U Directional Power Relay
  • Basler Electric BE2000E AVR Voltage Regulator
  • BASLER ELECTRIC BE1-50F2EA1PA0N0F Instantaneous Overcurrent Relay
  • BASLER ELECTRIC BE1-81T1EE1WA0N1F Underfrequency Relay
  • Basler BE1-67 Directional Overcurrent Relay
  • Basler BE1-25/79TR Reclosing Relay
  • Basler CEM-2020 Contact Expansion Module
  • Basler BE1-11 Overcurrent Protection Relay
  • Basler BE1-GPS Generator Protective Relay
  • BASLER ELECTRIC MVC-300 MANUAL VOLTAGE CONTROL UNIT 9121000106