Re: The Emission of Photons




"PD" <TheDraperFamily@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:1158271271.805832.32790@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
|
| Sorcerer wrote:
| > "PD" <TheDraperFamily@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
| > news:1158256858.084194.197060@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
| > |
| > | rev.goetz wrote:
| > | > Atomic nuclei emit photons, and specific entropy measures the ratio
of
| > | > photons per baryon (or the ratio of photons per proton). I am
| > | > wondering. How and why atomic nuclei emit photons?
| > |
| > | All charged particles emit photons, especially when there is a lower
| > | energy state available for occupation.
| >
| > Really? So if the electron is in the ground state, it is not a charged
| > particle?
| >
| >
| >
| > |
| > | > And what changes
| > | > inside an atomic nucleus when it emits a photon?
| > |
| > | The energy state of the nucleon that emitted it.
| >
| > Oh... I see, it is the NUCLEON that emits photons... got it...
|
| Yes, indeed. It is called nuclear gamma decay. Have you not heard of
| it?

Yes, but I don't what the ground state is. Void?
You haven't clue what you are babbling about.
Androcles

| >
| > Nuclear photons, huh?
| >
| >
| >
| > | This also has
| > | collective effects on the other nucleons, of course. It can be modeled
| > | in a way analogous to the way electrons in atoms emit photons.
| > |
| > | > For example, is
| > | > something inside the atomic nucleus converted into a photon?
| > |
| > | Depends on the process. Sometimes it's just binding energy.
| > |
| > | PD
| > Sometimes you haven't clue what you are babbling about.
| > Androcles
|


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