I would suggest reading the book QED: The Strange Theory of Light and Matter by Richard Feynman. He won the Nobel Prize for his theory of how light and matter interact and it has been tested to more accuracy than even Einstein’s Theory of Gravity.
The book is written for anyone to understand without any mathematics.
What makes his explanations so simple is he is adamant that photons are particles and explains everything as particles interacting.
So your question about EM becomes: an electron in a metal emits a photon, the photon travels until it hits another electron in a piece of metal, that electron’s energy is measured and you received the signal.
Thanks for the details. I am to the point now that the concepts are clear enough that solid literature could fill in some blanks. (It’s taken me about a year or so before I could actually begin to visualize wave/particle concepts. Not gonna lie: PBS Space Time and Sabine Hossenfelder videos helped a ton.)
Ok, cool. The issue was that I had previously visualized the EM wave as being more akin to how electrons flow through wires, but with more magic involved. Once I started to revisit many my core conceptual beliefs, there was a ton that didn’t make sense. Basically, you just gave me some validation, thanks. (There aren’t too many people in my life that are interested in the nuances of photons, believe it or not.)
I would suggest reading the book QED: The Strange Theory of Light and Matter by Richard Feynman. He won the Nobel Prize for his theory of how light and matter interact and it has been tested to more accuracy than even Einstein’s Theory of Gravity.
The book is written for anyone to understand without any mathematics.
What makes his explanations so simple is he is adamant that photons are particles and explains everything as particles interacting.
So your question about EM becomes: an electron in a metal emits a photon, the photon travels until it hits another electron in a piece of metal, that electron’s energy is measured and you received the signal.
Thanks for the details. I am to the point now that the concepts are clear enough that solid literature could fill in some blanks. (It’s taken me about a year or so before I could actually begin to visualize wave/particle concepts. Not gonna lie: PBS Space Time and Sabine Hossenfelder videos helped a ton.)
Ok, cool. The issue was that I had previously visualized the EM wave as being more akin to how electrons flow through wires, but with more magic involved. Once I started to revisit many my core conceptual beliefs, there was a ton that didn’t make sense. Basically, you just gave me some validation, thanks. (There aren’t too many people in my life that are interested in the nuances of photons, believe it or not.)