Detection of a non-interacting particle

In summary, the conversation discussed the concept of non-interacting particles and their detectability. It was argued that a free particle described by a plane wave in the QFT sense is still observable, but a never-interacting particle would be undetectable. The possibility of creating an undetectable particle through interaction was also considered. Overall, it was concluded that free particles are observable and meaningful, but the concept of a non-interacting particle remains a subject of debate.
  • #1
DrFaustus
90
0
In another thread, which I do not want to derail, I claimed that a free, non-interacting particle is not physical and that it cannot be detected or observed. It was pointed out to me that apparently I'm the only one on here who doubts about the possibility of detecting a non-interacting particle's energy, mass or spin.

Now, I stand on my ground and insist on the non detectability of free particles. What I'd like someone to explain me is how to detect such a prticle.

Please, before answering consider that you cannot see see such a particle (it does not interact with light), cannot bend its trajectory (no interaction with the EM field in general), you cannot have a bound state, you cannot pile it up and make a ball out of such matter, and so on and so on.

Am I really the only one who knows that you cannot detect a non interacting particle?
 
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  • #2
I think you have to precise and distinguish a never-interacting particle (i.e., worse than a neutrino) and a free (possibly charged) particle described with a free solution (plane wave). What do you exactly imply?
 
  • #3
A free particle, as an object described by a plane wave, i.e. a solution of the free field equations (pick your favourite field, scalar, spinor or vector) is what you mention as being "worse than a neutrino". The two concepts coincide.
 
  • #4
Bob_for_short said:
I think you have to precise and distinguish a never-interacting particle (i.e., worse than a neutrino) and a free (possibly charged) particle described with a free solution (plane wave). What do you exactly imply?
A plane wave is just a form the wave function of the particle can take and doesn't really have anything to do with being a free particle in the QFT sense. I can make a highly interacting particle such as a proton have a roughly plane-wave wavefunction by sending it off on its own in a vacuum, where it will be in free motion.
 
  • #5
A non-interacting particle would be undetectable by any reasonable definition of "non-interacting".

This started with a discussion about the approach taken by Weinberg in his QFT book, when I said that the particles that you get almost immediately are non-interacting, and Bob said it doesn't mean that they're undetectable. The next thing Weinberg does in the book is to add an interaction term to the Hamiltonian so that the irreducible representations are no longer independent of each other. This makes the particles "interacting", but it appears to be the same Hilbert space as before, so maybe Bob just means that the interacting particles in this theory are the same particles as the ones in the free-particle theory. It's just the Hamiltonian that's different, not the particles.
 
  • #6
Fredrik said:
A non-interacting particle would be undetectable by any reasonable definition of "non-interacting".
No. An electron decoupled from the quantized EMF is simply "incapable" of emitting photons if accelerated. It does not mean the electron is not capable of interaction with a detector (atoms). That is why I insist in distinguishing a never-interacting particle (non-observable whatever properties you assign to it) and a free particle - solution of decoupled QED equations. The latter is observable, of course. The non-relativistic (and relativistic) calculations of particle penetration in materials in QM use the usual Coulomb potential of interaction with atoms of medium. Similarly, free photons are also observable. They are just external (known) fields in the material charge equations of motion, they can excite and ionise atoms, although they cannot create an electron-positron pair.
 
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  • #7
DarMM said:
A plane wave is just a form the wave function of the particle can take and doesn't really have anything to do with being a free particle in the QFT sense. I can make a highly interacting particle such as a proton have a roughly plane-wave wavefunction by sending it off on its own in a vacuum, where it will be in free motion.
A free particle in a QFT sense is also observable - it is the zeroth approximation for calculations, it makes sense as an asymptotic state at t = ± ∞.

Free particle wave functions are involved in a free particle field in QFT: the corresponding c/a operators create/annihilate exactly these states.

Instead of considering a "highly interacting proton" (what does that mean? A strongly interacting proton or what?), let us consider a free atom. Its total wave function is a product of a plane wave describing the center of mass free motion and an atomic wave function depending on relative (internal) variables. Let us note that the corresponding equations are decoupled, yet both describe an interacting system – an atom. (What I propose in QED is the same thing.)

Now, we can construct two non-overlapping wave-packets corresponding to two distant atoms in the initial state and make them scatter off each other. The Coulomb atom-atomic potential contribution is zero in the initial state because of non-overlapping total wave functions. With time the atoms approach each other and scatter, the final state being a superposition of excites states of our again distant and free atoms. This is an exemplary model of interacting systems free in the In- and Out-states and free of conceptual and mathematical difficulties. Everything here is observable and meaningful. A rigorous physical QFT can be constructed in a similar way. What we have seen up to now are just sorry attempts to patch a failed self-action ansatz. In particular, they say that free particles are not observable. What physics becomes in hands of some?!
 
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  • #8
Fermi postulated the neutrino existence long before it was detected, because of the missing energy and electron energy spectrum in beta decay. So we could postulate another undetectable particle in a similar way. However, if the particle was (were) truly non-interacting, no interaction could create it either.
Bob S
 
  • #9
Bob S said:
Fermi postulated the neutrino existence long before it was detected, because of the missing energy and electron energy spectrum in beta decay. So we could postulate another undetectable particle in a similar way. However, if the particle was (were) truly non-interacting, no interaction could create it either.
Bob S

Bravo, Bob_S! You hit the point! Nice argument!

No need to assign to a particle some properties (spin, momentum, mass, etc.) if it declared to be non-observable (never-interacting). The zeroth-order approximations in QFT possesses certain properties just because they are observable.
 
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  • #10
Also, if the particle has some energy, it will have gravitational interactions.
 

Related to Detection of a non-interacting particle

What is a non-interacting particle?

A non-interacting particle is a type of particle that does not interact with other particles or fields in its environment. This means that it does not experience any forces or interactions, such as gravity or electromagnetism, and can travel through space without being affected.

Why is detection of non-interacting particles important?

The detection of non-interacting particles is important because it allows us to study and understand the properties and behavior of these particles. It also helps us to confirm the existence of new particles and theories, which can have significant impacts on our understanding of the universe.

How are non-interacting particles detected?

Non-interacting particles are typically detected using specialized equipment and techniques, such as particle accelerators, detectors, and imaging devices. These methods rely on the particle's interactions with other particles or fields to indirectly detect its presence.

What are some examples of non-interacting particles?

Some examples of non-interacting particles include neutrinos, which are electrically neutral and only interact weakly with other particles, and dark matter particles, which are believed to make up a significant portion of the universe but do not interact with light or other forms of electromagnetic radiation.

What are some challenges in detecting non-interacting particles?

One of the main challenges in detecting non-interacting particles is that they do not interact with traditional detection methods, making it difficult to directly observe their presence. Additionally, these particles are often very small and difficult to detect, requiring highly sensitive equipment and techniques.

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