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-   -   Is time lost in the reflection [mirror] process (https://www.askmehelpdesk.com/showthread.php?t=316193)

  • Feb 11, 2009, 01:03 PM
    Mortalsfool
    Is time lost in the reflection [mirror] process
    Is there a 'time' lost in an interval between when photons hit a mirrored surface and are converted to a reflection? It seems to me, knowing very little, that for one photon to excite another to replace it is a process. A 'process' indicates a loss of time in order to accomplish the exchange.

    Thanks for your help
  • Feb 11, 2009, 02:05 PM
    retsoksirhc

    As far as I know, photons don't 'replace' other photons. They are the same photons before and after they are reflected.

    It's hard to really tell anything for certain though, since a photon deals more with quantum physics than one might think. It has properties of a wave and a particle.
  • Feb 11, 2009, 02:20 PM
    Mortalsfool
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by retsoksirhc View Post
    As far as I know, photons don't 'replace' other photons. They are the same photons before and after they are reflected.

    It's hard to really tell anything for certain though, since a photon deals more with quantum physics than one might think. It has properties of a wave and a particle.

    If I'm not mistaken the process includes the excitation of the reflecting surface [for example aluminum] and causes a release of a proton taken from the surface.

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