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Please correct me if I'm wrong, but I believe that photons slow down when travelling through glass. Does this mean they gain mass? Otherwise, what happens to extra kinetic energy?

I understand now that the apparent slowing down is due to electron interactions, does the glass gain weight due to light travelling through it?

Qmechanic
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  • Some idea on "does glass gain weight": Einstein in his famous one page paper formulated that photons transmit, that they (at that time: apparently) "transfer inertia". He didn't say that photons Have inertia i.e. weight. In spite of exerting impulse/momentum they themselves do not weigh. ("The sun sail does not stand against it.") Often you come across statements that say e.g. pot of water heated up gains weight, electric field has inertia. If a particle has "relativistic" mass that does not mean it has weight (as it cannot be accelerated on scales). – Peter Bernhard Nov 17 '22 at 19:30

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Fundamental approach

Marek's answer is summarised shortly as "no". It is based on the most "fundamental" concepts of physics -- you got fundamental quantum particles -- photons, electrons and some others. And these particles interact with each other producing all the world around us. The properties of the particles, like their mass, charge, e.t.c. doesn't change whatever you do with them. And, therefore, the mass of the photon is always zero.

This appoach is very intuitive and of course the answer is correct... But one can look at the same problem from different perspective, obtaining a different answer:

Quasiparticles approach

Those fundamental particles are just excitations of the vacuum -- the universal medium for everything around us. We like to talk about particles, because they are "free" -- they are flying freely in the vacuum, rarely interacting with each other.

Now instead of vacuum we consider another "not so universal" medium -- a glass. Like everything else the glass is made of the mentioned fundamental particles. It turns out that one wouldn't want to talk about the fundamental photon inside a glass -- it always interacting with stuff in the matter: it scatters, got absorbed, got re-emitted e.t.c. In other words it is not "free". It is much easier to consider a quasiparticle, which is "nearly a photon". A quasiparticle is an excitation of the glassy medium. And it behaves like it is "free" in the glass -- it is flying freely in the glass, rarely interacting with other quasiparticles.

From that point of view the answer to the question is "yes" -- inside the glass the quasiparticle called "photon" has some mass, while in the vacuum the fundamental particle called "photon" hasn't.

This second point of view is much more elaborate and takes more effort to understand, but I think that it is more "flexible" and allows you to understand such things as renormalization, effective field theories, quarks and hadron structure and QCD, thermal field theory, e.t.c. After all, the thing we now call "the fundamental vacuum" can be just "a glass" made of something more fundamental.

Kostya
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  • I like this answer, it's a interesting take on the question. – dan_waterworth Dec 14 '10 at 14:47
  • Yes, I also like this. +1 – Marek Dec 14 '10 at 18:42
  • Thank you for this answer -- very enlightening (so to speak). – Stephen McAteer Jan 06 '12 at 23:56
  • @dan_waterworth Although I hesitate to say that there is a "correct picture", this quasiparticle take is one of the few that allows a full description of the physics: see my answer where I calculate the mass of the quasiparticle. – Selene Routley May 29 '15 at 11:46
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    I like the spirit of this answer, but one important correction: it's not true that "inside the glass the quasiparticle called 'photon' has some mass." That's only true inside of a superconductor. Inside of a non-superconducting medium like glass, the dressed photon correlator is still quasi-long ranged and the quasiparticle photon mass is still exactly zero because it's protected by gauge symmetry. The permittivity and permeability coefficients get renormalized, but the mass doesn't. – tparker Aug 31 '19 at 12:41
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Edit: thanks to all the commentators. Before I mixed together both scattering and absorption of light. I tried to update the answer to more accurately describe what is actually going on down there.

Note: I will only consider interaction with molecules of the material here. More advanced stuff like interaction with the lattice of crystals or interaction with free electrons in metals would need a separate discussion.


What happens is that when photon enters the matter it has a non-zero probability to scatter on atoms of the material. In QED (quantum electrodynamics) this process is realized by summing over all possible ways the photon can interact with electrons of the material. Simplest way is that the photon is absorbed by electron, thereby increasing its energy (but this is not an excitation to a precise energetic level; any energy will do) and after a little while electron emits a different photon. As correctly pointed out by Tobias, if there are more photons with the same energy and momentum nearby, the emitted photon will tend to have same characteristics. This is because photons are bosons and bosons like to occupy same states.

Now, all of these processes contribute to the final scattering amplitude. This is a complex number describing both the apparent slow-down of the photons on the matter and also absorption of light in the matter. Its value depends on the precise way molecule looks, what energy levels do electrons occupy and so on. In any case, you can (at least in principle) reduce all that complexity of single atom into a number that tells you the index of refraction and the coefficient of absorption. Note that this number will also depend on the energy of the incoming photon, giving dispersion.

If we want to find the actual time it will take photon (note that here the word photon is used liberally as it might get absorbed and re-emitted) to travel through the material, we are again encouraged to sum over all the possible trajectories and this means over all the possible scatterings on all of the atoms. One possible trajectory is that photon doesn't interact with anything. This is a dominant one that would be correct in vacuum. But now there is also a possibility that photon will scatter on some atoms (usually just one of them though, because the scattering probability is small) and this will modify the final amplitude. If there is no absorption, the only effect will be that it will "take the photon longer time to travel through material". If there is also absorption the probability of the photon to pass through the material will lower.

Of course, quantum theory is just probabilistic in nature and what this means is that if you let lots of photons go through the material then they will, in general, take some scattering on the atoms. So it can be said (and it is great deal correct) that matter's electrons "trap" the incoming light, making it propagate slower.

Marek
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    good answer, however, I don't understand why glass is transparent if electron interactions are the cause. Basically, why do photons get emitted in the same direction that they absorbed? – dan_waterworth Dec 14 '10 at 10:36
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    @dan-waterworth: When a plane wave pass through the glass, it is absorbed and reemitted. It is like multiple point source so the resulting wave is still a plane wave and it is still travel in the same direction, see Huygens' principle (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Huygens%27_principle). Glass is transparent because the light intensive do not decrease in this process (or little). – unsym Dec 14 '10 at 10:46
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    @dan_waterworth: very good question! It shows that actually a lot more is going on than what I said. Actually in some materials the photon can be scattered into different directions (and in these materials intensity of light decreases as it passes through) and also it can be completely absorbed by free electrons in metals and not re-emitted (and this increases the temperature of the material). It is also connected to the concept of black-body radiation. I'll think about how to summarize all of these effects in a simple and clear way and will update my answer later. – Marek Dec 14 '10 at 10:58
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    @hwlau: well, yeah. But this doesn't explain the difference between the optical properties of glass and wood. For that one has to look at the microscopic structure of the material. And deriving optical properties from first principles is actually not easy at all. – Marek Dec 14 '10 at 11:00
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    @dan photons get emitted in the same direction not because of their history (it's a brand new photon that gets emitted!) but because of the other photons, see Stimulated emission – Tobias Kienzler Dec 14 '10 at 11:15
  • @Marek: according to you, glass should have a refractive index of 1 (since it does not have any resonant electronic transitions in the visible range). – gigacyan Dec 14 '10 at 11:47
  • @gigacyan: you're right, thanks for pointing that out! This once again shows that my answer misses some important points. Updates incoming. – Marek Dec 14 '10 at 12:03
  • @Marek: There is only one sentence in your answer about a photon traveling through glass without scattering and it does not explain why it travels slower. I cannot see the relation between the question and your answer. – gigacyan Dec 14 '10 at 13:55
  • @gigacyan: I don't understand what you mean. If you want to determine a macroscopic result you have to take sum of the amplitudes over all possible trajectories and extremize that, because the most probable path corresponds to classical path. For photon in material this classical path can be computed as non-interacting path + paths interacting with one atoms + paths interacting with two atoms + and so on. It suffices to take first two terms of that summation to correctly derive decrease in the speed of light (and other effects) because probability of interaction is quite small. – Marek Dec 14 '10 at 17:02
  • @Marek: You describe scattering as an isotropic process (forget stimulated emission - your argument should work for a single photon). So, either the photon travels with no interaction (then it should travel with c) or it is scattered omnidirectionally. I don't see where does 1.5-fold decrease of photon speed comes from. – gigacyan Dec 14 '10 at 19:23
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    @gigacyan: this argument shouldn't and can't work for single photon. If you'll send out just one photon, you'll indeed usually see it propagate at speed of light, or (with lower probability) getting scattered into some random direction ;-) Only if you'll send lots of photons, the correct macroscopic picture will emerge. Namely, that the average behavior is the light going slower. And to explain this you definitely need to note that there are more photons around to account for their bosonic nature. In the same way, you will not observe Pauli exclusion principle with a single electron. – Marek Dec 14 '10 at 19:30
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I'd like to add to Kostya's Excellent Answer and also Marek's.

Kostya is actually describing a quantum superposition of free photon and excited matter states. Often in this scenario, the refractive index is described as arising from the repeated absorption and re-emission of the vacuum photons by the atoms/molecules of the medium. This is a good first picture, but it's more accurate to describe the situation as the quantum superposition just mentioned. The so called quasiparticle is this superposition, which is the energy eigenstate in the presence of the medium, i.e. the energy eigenstate of the electromagnetic field coupled to the excited matter states. The eigenstate (quasiparticle) is called various things depending on the exact nature of the interaction: polariton, plasmon, exciton, and so forth but, in principle, their essential nature as a quantum superposition of photon and raised matter states is exactly the same in each case.

You can calculate the rest mass of the quasiparticle as well. This is a way of expressing where the energy has "gone to" in the medium: we can move in the frame at rest relative to the quasiparticle and the disturbance has a nonzero energy $m_0\,c^2$ in this frame, representing energy stored in the exited matter states of the medium.

Let's calculate the rest mass of the quasiparticle from $E^2=p^2\,c^2 + m_0^2\,c^4$ and $p = \gamma\,m_0\,v$ with $v = c/n$, with, as usual, $\gamma = \frac{1}{\sqrt{1-{v^2}/{c^2}}}$ is the Lorentz factor. Let's do this from the frame at rest relative to the medium (although, of course, $m_0$ is Lorentz invariant, so we can do a corresponding calculation from any frame). Thus:

$$E^2 = p^2\,c^2 + m_0^2\,c^4=m_0^2\,c^4\left(\frac{1}{n^2\,\left(1-\frac{1}{n^2}\right)}+1\right)=m_0^2\,c^4\frac{n^2}{n^2-1}$$

or

$$m_0 = \frac{E}{c^2}\sqrt{1-\frac{1}{n^2}}$$

For $n=1.5$ (common glasses like window panes or N-BK7 - microscope slide glass) at $\lambda = 500\rm\,nm$, we get, from $E=h\,c/\lambda$, $m_0=3.3\times 10^{-36}{\rm kg}$ or about 3.6 millionths of an electron mass.

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Dear Dan, this is actually a very simple question. The phase velocity or group velocity of a photon may be smaller. But the energy of a single photon is always $$E=hf$$ where $h$ is Planck's constant and $f$ is the frequency. This is true for quanta in any material - and not only for photons, in fact. It's also true for gravitons, electrons, muons, or any other particles. This relationship between energy and frequency of the wave associated with the particle is totally universal - and follows from the fact that energy (the Hamiltonian) generates the evolution in time, i.e. is given by the frequency for all periodic wave functions.

The frequency of a photon doesn't change anywhere - it must still make the same number of "periods" per second, wherever you look - imagine that you emit a packet that has 500 maxima and 500 minima of a wave, so the same number will be seen everywhere.

So the energy of each photon remains constant as it moves through any environment. Of course, when it's absorbed, it gives its energy (or its part) to another particle.

Luboš Motl
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Transmission of light through glass has nothing to do with electron excitation and that is precisely why glass is transparent. In fact, incoming electromagnetic wave polarizes the medium that re-emits the radiation. Theoretically it could be re-emitted in any direction but it can be shown that different wavelets (small parts of the wave) will interfere positively only in the initial direction of light. How difficult it is to polarize a certain medium is characterized by its polarizability which is directly linked to the refractive index.

Now, to the question about the mass of the photon.

Photon momentum is defined as $\textbf{p}=\hbar\textbf{k}$. It can be shown that momenta of incident(i) and transmitted(t) photons are related as $$n_{ti}=\frac{p_t}{p_i}$$ where n is the refractive index. This means that for $n_{ti}>1$, $p_t>p_i$ so the momentum of the photon actually increases which can be attributed to an increase of the photon's effective mass (see F.R. Tangherlini, "On Snell's law and the Gravitational Deflection of Light", Am. J. Phys. 36, 1001 (1968).

Edit: The argument whether a photon's momentum in medium is $n$ times smaller of $n$ times larger is known as Abraham–Minkowski controversy and there are strong evidences for both definitions.

gigacyan
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  • Sorry, but the statement "has nothing to do with electron excitation" is definitely wrong. What do the photons interact with if not with electrons? And how else can they interact on microscopic level than by a basic QED $e + \gamma \to e$ process? – Marek Dec 14 '10 at 12:23
  • @Marek: Electron excitation only happens by resonant interaction. I did not say that there is no interaction at all - on the contrary, I wrote about polarization of the medium. – gigacyan Dec 14 '10 at 12:30
  • Of course I do agree that all of this can be swept under rug by considering just the scattering of the photon on the electron (where all of the excitations and de-excitations are summed over). (And this is the part that is missing in my answer.) Nevertheless, your answer, as currently stated, is just wrong. – Marek Dec 14 '10 at 12:32
  • @gigacyan: okay. Describe me the polarization on the microscopic level. I want to hear it down to the QED terms. Otherwise you're just reformulating the question in terms of classical physics and aren't really explaining anything at all. OP apparently wanted to know how things really work down to photons and electrons. – Marek Dec 14 '10 at 12:34
  • @Marek: OP asked "what happens to the mass of the photon" and I answered that. I did not invent this answer - as you can see from the reference, it is 42 years old. – gigacyan Dec 14 '10 at 12:45
  • @Marek: The explanation you are looking for is clearly beyond a scope of one comment and belongs to a textbook. I can recommend Optics by A.Sommerfeld, page 82, Chapter "The Quantum Theory of Light". – gigacyan Dec 14 '10 at 12:50
  • @gigacyan: fair enough. See my updated answer, by the way. – Marek Dec 14 '10 at 13:10
  • The update is good - at StE many "lengthy discussions" on how exactly the propagation in the medium works. The question of mass makes me wonder: Isn't speed of light a prerequisite of photons, to be a photon you must not have mass? Rest mass of a "photon" that does not travel at defined c speed wouldn't be zero any more, that would be no photon any more, but some other particle. This perplexes me. Maybe a photon can have a rest mass non zero when it is assumed that it has relativistic mass (sum is energy). That's in favor of part 1 of the answer. – Peter Bernhard Nov 17 '22 at 19:18
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The photon never slows down, as the particle goes through the medium of glass it is absorbed by the nearby electrons. The absorption and re-emitting of the photon takes time, we interpreted that as the photon slowing down. The photon is always going the same speed and always has zero mass.

akay47
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  • Can you answer the second part of my question, does the glass gain weight as light travels through it? – dan_waterworth Mar 04 '13 at 21:49
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    This kind of talk about "the" photon is tempting because it does not require verbal gymnastics, but it is misleading unless the reader/listener is sophisticated enough to translate it into the more correct ensemble or path-integral explanations. – dmckee --- ex-moderator kitten Jan 08 '14 at 19:22
  • This answer has very little explanatory power. Why, for instance, does the emitted light continue going in the same direction? What about light that is not resonant with any of the electrons' transition energies? Those photons slow down too, even thought they are not absorbed. – psitae Sep 28 '17 at 06:56