Could a photon, now or sometime in the future be found to have any data imprinted upon it recording all that which it has "hit" or ricocheted off of? — James Riley
If you're asking if we could store additional info besides wavelength, it seems unlikely. We'd have to hit the photon with energy, changing its wavelength. One photon is identical to any other except for its wavelength, there's no way to add information to it as far as I know, but I could be wrong. — fishfry
Actually, photons are the universal "carriers of information" in a manner similar to Shannon's "bits" & "bytes". Yet a single photon (bit) is too simple & generic (all identical) to carry much info. But, if you cram a bunch of photons together (bytes), they begin to look like the EverGreen EverGiven ship in the Suez canal. :nerd:Could a photon, now or sometime in the future be found to have any data imprinted upon it recording all that which it has "hit" or ricocheted off of? — James Riley
You may be led astray by some interpretations of PanPsychism, in which every particle in the world has "experiences". But, I'm afraid that a lonely photon would experience a poverty of meaning. What does a photon remember of the "experience" of bouncing off of a proton? "Watch where you're going idiot!" :joke:I knew it was a "reach" but whenever I think of something as a particle, I can't help but wonder what might be gleaned from it, based upon it's experiences. — James Riley
Could a photon, now or sometime in the future be found to have any data imprinted upon it recording all that which it has "hit" or ricocheted off of? — James Riley
might leave a "brown" finger print on the photon — James Riley
Isn't that just the wavelength or frequency of the photon? — fishfry
I honestly don't know. But if it is, can it be captured after the fact (i.e. not in the instant as part of a picture)? — James Riley
After which fact? — fishfry
Where light is streaming into a room and no one is there to photograph it today. The next day, a scientist shows up and starts collecting the heat energy from the sofa — James Riley
I do not know, other than the large, overwhelming majority of rooms in the world don't have photodetectors in them, unless sofas are not different, in which case can we do with a sofa that which we can do with a photo detector? And, how far back could we go? Could we see what happened in that room 100 years ago? — James Riley
This is far from your original question. You asked if we could imprint data on a photon — fishfry
I want to know if data has been imprinted on a photon that we can glean after the fact. — James Riley
I don't want to imprint data on a photon. Rather, I want to know if data has been imprinted on a photon that we can glean after the fact. I tried to use the analogy of a bullet. One can sometimes take a bullet and determine that it first went through a shirt with X thread count, then glanced off a bone before passing through guts, out and into some kind of wood. This is data recorded on the bullet. I thought maybe, someday, we might be able to look into the past by finding evidence of what light "saw" in it's journey. I don't suppose a whole lot happens to it in flight from that distant star. Maybe it bends around some curve of space or whatever, but that may not leave a print that stays after the flight is over. And, while it might tell us something about the past regarding the star it came from, I'm thinking closer to home. — James Riley
I don’t have the physics background of fishfry — Possibility
With a photon, we would need to start with known origins, and then group measurements of many, many different photons arriving at the same point to try and distinguish alternative trajectories. There are a lot of variables to consider along the way, not the least of which is that we cannot differentiate two photons arriving at the same point simultaneously, regardless of their journey... — Possibility
Like any other quantum particles, Photons can become entangled. But I don't know if that coupled state can be used to record arbitrary information, beyond the historical fact of entanglement. Maybe you can dig deeper into the DARPA report. :smile:What does entanglement have to do with light. I know light can be turned into heat but I am not aware of it having spin — Gregory
The concept of recording historical information in waves of Photons, sounds similar to the notion of information "imprinted" upon gravitational waves of Gravitons. But since gravitons are still hypothetical, the question is moot. :chin:Could a photon, now or sometime in the future be found to have any data imprinted upon it recording all that which it has "hit" or ricocheted off of? — James Riley
When light impacts matter it usually transfers some of its energy to the impactee. But a reflective surface, like a mirror, seems to act like rubber to bounce the light away without absorbing much of its energy. I don't know the physics behind mirrors, but I suspect it has something to do with smooth continuous surfaces and short wavelengths. A mirrored surface seems to work like the opposite of a black body, which absorbs almost all energy. :chin:Digression: does a photon lose anything for having reflected? — James Riley
Gravity is a strange property of "curved" space. Perhaps gravitational waves are merely regular short "curves" propagating through space. Unfortunately, the notion of curved emptiness is counter-intuitive. Go ask Einstein -- it's all his fault. :smile:If gravity is not a force how can there be gravitational waves? — Gregory
That sounds OK intuitively. But it's not how a physicist would describe it. What we experience as a pulling or squishing Force, according to Einstein, is merely acceleration in space. It's the relative motion that we subjectively feel as gravity "squishing" us. Objectively, an object that is not moving relative to the weighing device has no measurable "heaviness" (weight), but it may still have theoretical Mass. It all depends on your frame of reference.I'm thinking that the heaviness of objects causes a squish on spacetime and that actions that seem like a "force" are really radiations of energy. So we would have weight and energy that would account for what appears to be Newtonian force. Is that explanation sound in your mind? — Gregory
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