Interesting, I learned something new today :D
Comment on Can you have an infinitely long wavelength of light? Or is there some maximum?
remon@ani.social 23 hours ago
There is no upper limit, so really this comes down to how big the universe is.
It’s properties would be that it’s extremely low energy … and basically impossible to detected as you’d need a universe-sized antenna.
For short wavelengths you’ll eventually concentrate so much energy in once spot that it will form a black hole. So that would be the lower limit.
sbeak@sopuli.xyz 23 hours ago
jaybone@lemmy.zip 19 hours ago
How would you create the infinite wavelength? Would you redshift a light source for eternity? Would you have to move it at the speed of light?
remon@ani.social 18 hours ago
Infinities are generally outside of practical applications, so you wouldn’t. It’s more of a thought experiment.
ellypony@lemmy.world 22 hours ago
this is actually one of the most interesting things I’ve read in awhile.
Zwuzelmaus@feddit.org 22 hours ago
I’d say we have set an artificial limit: at some frequency/wavelength, we do not call it “light” anymore. Around 1mm, we call it “Radar” or “microwaves”, and at about 1 m or more, we call it “radio”.
remon@ani.social 22 hours ago
Unless you specifically say “visible light” I assume “light” to just mean electromagnetic radiation.
Successful_Try543@feddit.org 20 hours ago
Otherwise, the answer would be trivial, about 800 nm.
FRYD@sh.itjust.works 22 hours ago
The idea that a and very small wavelength would cause a black hole doesn’t really make sense to me since I thought a black hole requires mass. I’m no physicist, so I don’t really know.
A search about light with a Planck wavelength came up with this result which seems to claim that eventually the wavelength would become so small as to no longer be capable of holding information and would essentially do nothing.
remon@ani.social 22 hours ago
It’s mass OR energy.
Light, even though massless will still bend (and be affected by distorted spacetime) because it has energy in form of momentum. (See: gravitational lensing).
yetAnotherUser@discuss.tchncs.de 21 hours ago
Mass and energy are basically the same thing though. Since
E = mc²
you can substitute mass in any equation withE / c²
.