The magnitude of the charge on a photon is 4/3 atto Coulombs, 1.33E-18 Coulombs.
Photon amplitude refers to the strength or magnitude of the electric field associated with a photon. It represents the maximum displacement of the electric field from its equilibrium position. In quantum theory, it is related to the probability amplitude of the photon being in a particular state.
The photon IS the particle in this case. It isn't known to be made up of any smaller particles. The electric charge of a photon is zero.
A photon is a bundle of energy with a zero charge. Photons are elementary particles that make up light and other forms of electromagnetic radiation.
Photon charges refer to the electric charge carried by photons, which are particles of light. Photons are electrically neutral, meaning they do not have a charge. However, their interactions with charged particles can influence their behavior, such as scattering or absorption. Overall, photon charges do not directly impact the behavior of light particles, as photons themselves do not possess a charge.
Whatever be the magnitude of charge, two charges will always exert equal force on each other. As force depends on the product of magnitude of charges, it will increase if magnitude is doubled but will remain same for both the charges.
The electric charges of the proton and electron are equal in magnitude (size, strength), and opposite in sign.
A photon has zero electrical charge.
No. Otherwise it wouldn't be a photon.
Assuming the photon is reflected into the same medium it came from (so we can ignore refraction), its momentum differs only directionally, its magnitude stays the same. The directional component of its momentum vector is always pointing in the direction it's propagating. Refraction is the means by which the magnitude component of the vector changes. The change in momentum of photon is nh/lambda.
Photon amplitude refers to the strength or magnitude of the electric field associated with a photon. It represents the maximum displacement of the electric field from its equilibrium position. In quantum theory, it is related to the probability amplitude of the photon being in a particular state.
The photon IS the particle in this case. It isn't known to be made up of any smaller particles. The electric charge of a photon is zero.
A photon is a bundle of energy with a zero charge. Photons are elementary particles that make up light and other forms of electromagnetic radiation.
Yes, the electric field created by a point charge is directly proportional to the magnitude of the charge. As the charge increases, the electric field strength at a given distance from the charge also increases.
They are equal in magnitude but opposite in charge.
Photon charges refer to the electric charge carried by photons, which are particles of light. Photons are electrically neutral, meaning they do not have a charge. However, their interactions with charged particles can influence their behavior, such as scattering or absorption. Overall, photon charges do not directly impact the behavior of light particles, as photons themselves do not possess a charge.
Whatever be the magnitude of charge, two charges will always exert equal force on each other. As force depends on the product of magnitude of charges, it will increase if magnitude is doubled but will remain same for both the charges.
Electrons have negative charge and protons have positive charge. These charges always have equal magnitude but opposite signs in an atom, maintaining electrical neutrality.