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Here are a few commonly heard sentences that will make my question clear:

Statements #1 “The Michelson Morley experiment once and for all did away with the ether or the idea that light needs a medium in which to travel” “Light can travel through empty space”

Statements #2 “Light travels though the electromagnetic field” “The photon field is only one of the fields for each particle in the standard model.” “There must be dark matter in the universe for our current model of gravity to make sense.” “Space is not empty. A quantum foam fills it”

You can see the confusion that arises from the conflicting statements which are commonly heard in physics.

The fact that light travels via an electromagnetic field is in clear contradiction to the statement that light travels through empty space. I suppose we could try to join empty space and the EM field into one thing by saying light is the field. Frankly, that sounds like doublespeak.

What am I missing? Light is a disturbance in the EM field. There is no empty space. Light travels through a field.

Why do some physicists say light can travel through empty space?

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    $\begingroup$ Because people demand sound-bite answers to complicated things. $\endgroup$
    – m4r35n357
    Commented Feb 10, 2021 at 17:57

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I guess what a lot of people mean when they say that light travels through empty space is that it doesn't require a physical medium (matter) to travel through - like sound waves do.

The fact of the matter is that light does travel in the electromagnetic field, but the electromagnetic field is just a mathematical tool - as are all the other fields in QFT. You can't touch the EM field, just like you can't touch the fields that give rise to physical matter. You might say that we can touch matter and so those fields are more real. However, the sensation of touching those fields is just a result of electromagnetic interactions between the particles in ourselves and those in the object we are touching, and the reason for that being true is no more real than the reason that light can move from A to B.

To answer your specific points, the Michelson-Morley experiment proved that light travels at a constant speed for all observers. It proved that there was no physically-measurable medium in which light travels through (like sound). The electromagnetic field is how we describe light moving, however, it is not a physical object - it is just a mathematical tool and so only exists on paper.

I think the confusion in terminology comes from people trying to attach physical meaning to fields. Maybe you can attach meaning to them, and one day we will be able to look at them in a different way to how we can now. However, it must be noted that the fields introduced in QFT are mathematical tools, and that is all they are. We should not imagine them as filling space like a fluid, they simply make useful and accurate predictions.

In summary, they tell us how everything works - they will never tell us why.

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    $\begingroup$ "the electromagnetic field is just a mathematical tool" That can be said of the entire body of physics, so it is a vacuous statement. $\endgroup$
    – my2cts
    Commented Feb 10, 2021 at 20:48
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    $\begingroup$ This question is not asking either "why" light travels through empty space nor "how" light travels through empty space, but rather why we can assert that it does, and what is the meaning of that assertion. $\endgroup$ Commented Feb 12, 2021 at 7:17
  • $\begingroup$ @my2cts Do you think the entire body of physics is just a mathematical tool? What about matter? Do you eat mathematical formulae when hungry? $\endgroup$ Commented Apr 19, 2021 at 21:16
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Why do some physicists say light can travel through empty space?

What a physicist means by this is that there exist non-trivial vacuum solutions to Maxwell's equations. A vacuum solution is one where the sources are zero. In the case of Maxwell's equations that means that the charge density and the current density are zero. Additionally, the specific solutions are also solutions to the wave equation and waves are often described as "traveling".

Of course, "there exist non-trivial vacuum solutions to Maxwell's equations which are also solutions to the wave equation" is not a description that will really help most people. So instead we say "light can travel through empty space". This indeed conveys the idea well, with an unavoidable loss of technical precision. It is a fine non-technical statement, to be understood without too much nit-picking.

saying light is the field. Frankly, that sounds like doublespeak.

I think that is actually the correct statement. The idea that light travels through the electromagnetic field is strange. If I say that a plane travels through the air that means that there is some distinction between the plane and the air. They are different things and one is physically located in the other. That does not correctly express the relationship between light and the electromagnetic field.

Light is a specific type of solution to Maxwell's equations, which defines electromagnetic fields. Specifically light is a vacuum solution with travelling waves (perhaps even specifically waves with wavelengths in the optical part of the spectrum). As such, light is indeed an electromagnetic field and there is no in-principle distinction between it and the field. So saying that light travels through the electromagnetic field is more like saying that wind travels through air than that a plane travels through air. You can say it, and you are not completely wrong, but it is strange.

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  • $\begingroup$ I see no problem with saying "light travels through the EM field". It is conceptually the same as "sound travels through air" and "water waves travel through water". $\endgroup$
    – M. Winter
    Commented Sep 14, 2023 at 10:15
  • $\begingroup$ I see a problem, as explained in my answer. You are welcome to write your own answer. $\endgroup$
    – Dale
    Commented Sep 14, 2023 at 10:52
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When it is said that light can travel through empty space, it is meant that it does not need matter to propagate.

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I think it's likely due to the fact that for many centuries, "vacuum" and "empty space" had the same meaning. The vacuum was seen as something that had absolutely nothing in it.

Now, "vacuum" is defined as space that contains no matter (but might contain non-matter).

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  • $\begingroup$ What is non-matter? You do have a point.The term "empty space" should be defined in the discussion. $\endgroup$
    – my2cts
    Commented Feb 13, 2021 at 20:44
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    $\begingroup$ Matter is any particle (or combination of particles) that act as if it has both rest mass and volume. Non-matter would be everything else, including massless particles such as photons, or other energy phenomena or waves such as light, or quantum fields, or quantum foam. Basically, non-matter is usually synonymous with energy. $\endgroup$
    – cowlinator
    Commented Feb 16, 2021 at 15:09
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The EM field permeates all of space (even in vacuum), just like all other fields like the gravitational field and the others.

The photon is the excitation of the EM field, and this excitations propagates as a wave when we talk about EM radiation. Emphasis is on the radiation.

So even when we are in vacuum (even like in the voids of intergalactic space), the EM field still permeates all of it. It is not empty. It is said as you say that light can travel through this void because the fields all permeate it.

What is confusing as you say is that people usually talk about media that are required for certain waves like sound to travel through like sound travels through air or water. Air and water are made up of particles of matter, and in everyday life we call these media.

The Michelson–Morley experiment was an attempt to detect the existence of the luminiferous aether, a supposed medium permeating space that was thought to be the carrier of light waves.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michelson%E2%80%93Morley_experiment

You mention the Michelson-Morley experiment, and it proved that there was no ordinary medium (meaning made up of matter particles) that light would travel through.

The other very nice example of this is gravitational waves, they too do not need any physical medium (made up of matter particles) to propagate, since they themselves are the stretching and squeezing of spacetime itself. This radiation travels through empty space of course, because it is the wave that exist and propagates in spacetime itself.

So yours is a beautiful example because today we know that not only EM waves but gravitational waves too propagate through vacuum without the need of a medium (made up of matter particles), just because both are propagating excitations and distortions of the underlying fields and spacetime itself.

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