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  2. Photon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photon

    If photons were not purely massless, their speeds would vary with frequency, with lower-energy (redder) photons moving slightly slower than higher-energy photons. Relativity would be unaffected by this; the so-called speed of light, c , would then not be the actual speed at which light moves, but a constant of nature which is the upper bound on ...

  3. Neutrino - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neutrino

    The neutrino [a] was postulated first by Wolfgang Pauli in 1930 to explain how beta decay could conserve energy, momentum, and angular momentum ().In contrast to Niels Bohr, who proposed a statistical version of the conservation laws to explain the observed continuous energy spectra in beta decay, Pauli hypothesized an undetected particle that he called a "neutron", using the same -on ending ...

  4. Neutrino theory of light - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neutrino_theory_of_light

    The neutrino theory of light is the proposal that the photon is a composite particle formed of a neutrino–antineutrino pair.It is based on the idea that emission and absorption of a photon corresponds to the creation and annihilation of a particle–antiparticle pair.

  5. Light - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Light

    Like all types of electromagnetic radiation, visible light propagates by massless elementary particles called photons that represents the quanta of electromagnetic field, and can be analyzed as both waves and particles. The study of light, known as optics, is an important research area in modern physics.

  6. Quantization of the electromagnetic field - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantization_of_the...

    Photons are massless particles of definite energy, definite momentum, and definite spin. To explain the photoelectric effect, Albert Einstein assumed heuristically in 1905 that an electromagnetic field consists of particles of energy of amount hν, where h is the Planck constant and ν is the wave frequency.

  7. Mass in special relativity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mass_in_special_relativity

    A so-called massless particle (such as a photon, or a theoretical graviton) moves at the speed of light in every frame of reference. In this case there is no transformation that will bring the particle to rest. The total energy of such particles becomes smaller and smaller in frames which move faster and faster in the same direction.

  8. High-energy cosmic neutrino detected under Mediterranean Sea

    www.aol.com/news/high-energy-cosmic-neutrino...

    One called ARCA - 3,450 meters (2.1 miles) deep near Sicily - is designed to find high-energy neutrinos. One called ORCA - 2,450 meters (1.5 miles) deep near Provence, France - is designed to ...

  9. Matter creation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matter_creation

    To create an electron-positron pair, the total energy of the photons, in the rest frame, must be at least 2m e c 2 = 2 × 0.511 MeV = 1.022 MeV (m e is the mass of one electron and c is the speed of light in vacuum), an energy value that corresponds to soft gamma ray photons.