Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Yes, but what IS light?

My astronomy teacher told us something pretty crazy today.  He claimed that we (and by we, I mean him and other crazy smart scientist folk) don’t know what light is.  He told us that he can tell us how it behaves, but not what is IS.  It acts like a wave and like a particle at the same time.  It has no mass but it has energy and the ability to make things happen.  He said the closest definition he could give us was that it is a way of transmitting energy between masses… but that was not a nearly full enough definition.

I think it’s crazy that we don’t have an answer to this.  We have equations – mathematical interpretations of how it works.  We know how to use it, both in daily life and in crazy-awesome-sciencey-stuff (my technical jargon needs a little work).  But we have not yet figured out its essence.  It’s almost a philosophy thing.  “Yes, but what IS light?”  Can you hear the dusty old professor asking?

My instructor today told us a story about his college days.  He went and asked his “really old, really German” physics professor to explain light to him, and the professor referred him to the philosophy department.  “We don’t answer questions like that in physics.”

So, light is a duality.  Light is mathematical.  Light is without substance but not without influence.  Light is… sounding like the start to a really great think and a really great write.

3 comments:

  1. Light is something that we just normally accept, something that allows us to see and we don't usually think much about it. But scientists obviously have a different viewpoint. Sometimes its the different views we receive from others that lead to great stories. Writing about light would be incredibly open-ended and can definitely be a great place to start.

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  2. It is interesting how we accept light to give us a way to see into darkness. How, in the Bible, light was one of the first things created. However, what is light? Something that is not questioned, but is appreciated. Young children are not afraid thanks to a tiny little bulb that gives them the ability to see pass the shadows. The light from the sun provides energy for the plants to grow for food for animals and the animals who eat the animals who eat the plants (as roundabout as that was phrased). Light is something to ponder, but no matter what, light is something we have embraced as a part of our lives.

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  3. I believe the reason we don't have words to describe what light is, is because it's circular. To have words in our language that explain it, we would have had to have people who knew what they were talking about it. There's plenty of things that go on in our world unexplained, things people write off or set aside for another time- phenomena. Light is what it is; it's us and our culture that must adapt and change to build words to understand it.

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