Grand-Tension8668
Grand-Tension8668 OP t1_j8morhq wrote
Reply to comment by aiusepsi in When measuring the wavelength of EM radiation... what's actually being measured? by Grand-Tension8668
...Well, it's helpful to be reminded that EM fields aren't necessarily changing their properties over time, at least
Grand-Tension8668 OP t1_j8mj55w wrote
Reply to comment by shikuto in When measuring the wavelength of EM radiation... what's actually being measured? by Grand-Tension8668
...whoops
Grand-Tension8668 OP t1_j8miiow wrote
Reply to comment by mywhitewolf in When measuring the wavelength of EM radiation... what's actually being measured? by Grand-Tension8668
It's certainly helpful. I have started to "get" somewhere along the way that EM waves are oscillating in 3D space and therefore the typical 2D squiggly line isn't sufficient, and that photons are somehow more like an intersecting point.
Grand-Tension8668 OP t1_j8k7co9 wrote
Reply to comment by Movpasd in When measuring the wavelength of EM radiation... what's actually being measured? by Grand-Tension8668
Thanks a lot for this reply. I've definitely started recognizing what you're trying to say in those other posts, that things really approach a point where you need to trust the math and coming at it the other way around fails to create an accurate understanding of things. (And that our intuitive understanding of what "stuff" is doesn't really hold water in an absolute sense).
I think I'm coming out of this with a less incorrect "mode C" mental model, at least– EM fields change over time / distance (one in the same in this case but whatever) in a cyclical way, so they're waves. We can measure how long it takes for one "wave cycle" to happen, as in the distance traveled as a point oscillates between the electo- part and the -magnetism part. ...Which is certainly still a pretty wrongheaded explanation and I really need to start learning the math of physics in my spare time.
Grand-Tension8668 OP t1_j8k4vno wrote
Reply to comment by platoprime in When measuring the wavelength of EM radiation... what's actually being measured? by Grand-Tension8668
That does make more sense.
Grand-Tension8668 OP t1_j8jz4i7 wrote
Reply to comment by platoprime in When measuring the wavelength of EM radiation... what's actually being measured? by Grand-Tension8668
u/shikuto's comment got me to sort of picture how EM fields are waves (they're traveling through space as they oscillate, after all, which is all a wave is), but it's still surprising to me to say that the change in polarity is actually a locational change, if that's what you're saying.
Submitted by Grand-Tension8668 t3_1125ccr in askscience
Grand-Tension8668 OP t1_j8n4uz4 wrote
Reply to comment by Nescio224 in When measuring the wavelength of EM radiation... what's actually being measured? by Grand-Tension8668
That definitely helps me grasp the idea that really we're trying to apply the closest concepts that we have, but that they're sort of just touchstones to use as you work to understand the full picture. ...Of course on some level that's true of how we understand most things in science, you work with what's good enough until it isn't any more.