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Waves • Traveling waves: Traveling, periodic, sinusoidal (Shaped
Waves • Traveling waves: Traveling, periodic, sinusoidal (Shaped

... properties of light, but it is a peculiarity of quantum mechanics that lets this happen even if there is only one photon in the field. Similarly particles like electrons are also entities in a quantum matter field, and they have wave properties. An electron moving with linear momentum p has properti ...
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... 10.) A solid cylinder of radius R = 2 cm and mass M = 100 g rolls without slipping down an inclined plane. If it starts from rest at an elevation h = 25 cm, what is its translational speed when it reaches the base of the incline? Repeat the calculation for a solid cylinder with R = 4 cm and M = 100 ...
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... probe of the physical conditions. Polarization studies will either confirm the basic model, establishing the geometry of the system and the parameters of the hot spot(s) and the shock, or perhaps result in a qualitatively new model. Even if an X-ray burster has not been detected as an AMSP, we still ...
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DP Physics 4.1 Oscillations Name: 1. A wave can be described as

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17AP_Physics_C_-_Rotational_Motion_II

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17AP_Physics_C_-_Rotational_Motion_II

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Reveiw PPT 3_Forces_CM_Momentum_Impulse

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17AP_Physics_C_-_Rotational_Motion_II

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Photon polarization

Photon polarization is the quantum mechanical description of the classical polarized sinusoidal plane electromagnetic wave. Individual photon eigenstates have either right or left circular polarization. A photon that is in a superposition of eigenstates can have linear, circular, or elliptical polarization.The description of photon polarization contains many of the physical concepts and much of the mathematical machinery of more involved quantum descriptions, such as the quantum mechanics of an electron in a potential well, and forms a fundamental basis for an understanding of more complicated quantum phenomena. Much of the mathematical machinery of quantum mechanics, such as state vectors, probability amplitudes, unitary operators, and Hermitian operators, emerge naturally from the classical Maxwell's equations in the description. The quantum polarization state vector for the photon, for instance, is identical with the Jones vector, usually used to describe the polarization of a classical wave. Unitary operators emerge from the classical requirement of the conservation of energy of a classical wave propagating through media that alter the polarization state of the wave. Hermitian operators then follow for infinitesimal transformations of a classical polarization state.Many of the implications of the mathematical machinery are easily verified experimentally. In fact, many of the experiments can be performed with two pairs (or one broken pair) of polaroid sunglasses.The connection with quantum mechanics is made through the identification of a minimum packet size, called a photon, for energy in the electromagnetic field. The identification is based on the theories of Planck and the interpretation of those theories by Einstein. The correspondence principle then allows the identification of momentum and angular momentum (called spin), as well as energy, with the photon.
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