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Premise: The Breit–Wheeler process is a pair production process in which a positron–electron pair is created from the collision of two photons.

Background: In relativistic QFT, solutions that obey the mass-energy-momentum relation are called "on-shell" while those that do not are called "off-shell." The former are referred to as "real" and "physical" while the latter are referred to as "virtual." This, naively, seems to imply that virtual or off-shell particles should not be physically measureable (i.e., according to the energy-time uncertainty principle, they appear and disappear in a timescale that is smaller than what we can measure). However, the result of the recent Breit–Wheeler experiment is interpreted as measuring the off-shell photons which have an (effective?) mass, and not the on-shell photons which have zero rest mass.

Questions: Can off-shell mass be measured in principle? Was off-shell mass of photons measured in the recent Breit-Wheeler experiment? If so, how did that (effective?) mass compare to the mass of the gold atoms used in the experiment?

Note: I'm out of my expertise here, feel free to correct me (especially regarding my understanding of the interpretation of the Breit–Wheeler experiment). An answer that is well cited is more likely to be accepted.

Urb
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  • From reading the question and the abstract of the paper you link, it is not clear to me at all why you would think one can measure anything relating to the B-W process as "the off-shell mass of photons". Can you be more explicit about what you mean there? 2. The misunderstanding of virtual particles as "off-shell states" and the misapplication of an alleged "time-energy uncertainty principle" have been discussed before, e.g. in https://physics.stackexchange.com/q/230113/50583 (virtual particles) and https://physics.stackexchange.com/q/53802/50583 (time-energy uncertainty)
  • – ACuriousMind Aug 11 '21 at 15:05