Curious If one was able to see a Graviton, what would they be looking for? Could it only be seen under a microscope? Does it have a color or emit any type of light? How would it behave?
I imagine it is more or less represented by the Planck mass. Unfortunately, you would likely never be able to "see" such a thing per se because it would ostensibly only "materialize" once confined within a Planck volume, thus forming an oh-so-short-lived black hole.Curious If one was able to see a Graviton, what would they be looking for? Could it only be seen under a microscope? Does it have a color or emit any type of light? How would it behave?
If a photon can absorb a graviton, then who's in the drivers seat, the photon or the graviton? Or does the photon get to be a photon with the perks of a graviton? Or am I thinking about it all wrong?Gravitons are placeholders in the search for quantum gravity. They are produced by the gravitational field, so they interact with any particle that has mass.
Photons are particles of the EM (Electromagnetic Field) and do have relativistic mass. So gravitons can’t emit light (photons) but photons can absorb and emit gravitons.
To “see” something, it has to emit photons or interact with something that does. When you see a dog, you are really seeing the interaction between the dog and the photon flux striking it. Sometimes, things are excited to emit photons, like fluorescence. In those cases you are seeing light coming from the observed thing.
But in all cases, your eyes are just detecting photons, and the ”seeing” is about interpreting the patterns of light and darkness on your retina. Since photons emit gravitons, it is not possible for gravitons to emit photons.
This all assumes things are as they seem and gravity is a quantum effect. If not, gravitons are just a phantom of people’s brains.
So does the graviton create the black hole?I imagine it is more or less represented by the Planck mass. Unfortunately, you would likely never be able to "see" such a thing per se because it would ostensibly only "materialize" once confined within a Planck volume, thus forming an oh-so-short-lived black hole.
On the grand scale of course we should be able to detect it's quantum signature in the form of Hawking radiation being emitted by the much larger black holes which surround us in the cosmos.
It depends. Think about gravitons and then try some psilocybin. Then let me know what color the graviton is.Does it have a color
No, the collapsed mass makes the gravitons.So does the graviton create the black hole?
I think you. should read about QFT (Quantum Field Theory). It might help clarify some things about the nature of “particles”.If a photon can absorb a graviton, then who's in the drivers seat, the photon or the graviton? Or does the photon get to be a photon with the perks of a graviton? Or am I thinking about it all wrong?
Would it be a common for gravitons to hang around the event horizon of a black hole?No, the collapsed mass makes the gravitons.
The color of theIt depends. Think about gravitons and then try some psilocybin. Then let me know what color the graviton is.
What about traveling past the black hole? Or at some distance to where the hole still has its pull?No. If they hung around, the black hole would have no gravitational pull.
Quantum field theory holds that the four fundamental forces are mediated by vector bosons. The transfer of momentum due to the forces involve an exchange of these particles, which travel at the speed of light. The forces and associated particles are:
Electromagnetic: photons
Strong: gluons
Weak: intermediate bosons W0, W+ and W-
Gravity: gravitons
No.Could these be Gravitons?