POV-Ray : Newsgroups : povray.off-topic : Random answer #82498d9935 : Re: Random answer #82498d9935 Server Time
5 Jul 2024 07:29:16 EDT (-0400)
  Re: Random answer #82498d9935  
From: Kenneth
Date: 16 Oct 2015 20:30:00
Message: <web.5621958d1e970c2733c457550@news.povray.org>
That's quite an interesting presentation. (And I didn't know Feynman's lectures
were available online; thanks for the link.)

Something that has always puzzled me about this topic (once I started thinking
about it!) was an apparent paradox: If light shines on a glass plate in a
vacuum, the light 'apparently' slows down, inside the glass (according to the
glass's index of refraction.) But when it emerges from the other side, it speeds
back up to the speed of light(!) Since the light beam didn't 'gain' any energy
inside the glass, it seemed obvious that the light didn't really 'slow down,'
but that some other explanation was necessary-- which Feynman describes nicely
(if a bit too mathematically, for my poor brain.)

I've also read other explanations of this idea that light slows down inside a
material: simply put, that the photons have to exchange their energy with other
electrons as they pass through, in a cascading fashion from one atom to the
next-- which takes a finite time, from entry to exit. I'm not sure if this idea
is in agreement with Feynman's explanation, though.

By the way, another good source of info is Feynman's (small) book QED: THE
STRANGE STORY OF LIGHT AND MATTER (about quantum electrodynamics.) It's
surprisingly readable(!), without much math at all. Highly recommended.


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