Spontaneous emission / Stimulated emission
/ Absorption
In this section, Feynman discusses spontaneous emission,
stimulated emission, and absorption of radiation under the “Einstein’s laws of
radiation,” based on Einstein’s (1917) paper On the Quantum Theory of
Radiation. It is worth noting that Einstein himself did not use the term “spontaneous
emission” and “stimulated emission”; instead, he described them as “without
excitation from external causes” and “changes of state due to irradiation”
respectively. Moreover, while Feynman refers only to “thermal equilibrium,” Einstein
distinguished among three types of equilibrium: thermal, dynamical,
and thermodynamic.
1. Spontaneous Emission
“Now what is the formula going to be for the rate
of emission from m to n? Einstein proposed that
this must have two parts to it. First, even if there were no light present,
there would be some chance that an atom in an excited state would fall to a
lower state, emitting a photon; this we call spontaneous emission
(Feynman et al., 1963).”
Feynman
explains spontaneous emission as the process by which an excited atom emits a
photon even in the absence of external radiation (including light). This concept was
introduced by Einstein in his 1917 paper: “According to Hertz, an oscillating Planck resonator radiates energy in
the well-known way, regardless of whether or not it is excited by an external
field.” In Einstein’s theory, spontaneous emission is treated
as a random, inherent property of the atom—essentially a “black box” process.
However, his treatment was phenomenological rather than microscopic: he modeled
it as a fundamental statistical process without specifying the underlying physical
mechanism. Consequently, the exact emission time, emission direction, and the
particular atom within an ensemble that undergoes the transition are
individually unpredictable and can only be described probabilistically for
large collections of atoms.
“Thus the analog of spontaneous radiation of a
classical system is that if the atom is in an excited state there is a certain
probability Amn,
which depends on the levels again, for it to go down from m to n,
and this probability is independent of whether light is shining on the atom or
not (Feynman et al., 1963).”
Modern Quantum Electrodynamics (QED) shows that
spontaneous emission is not “spontaneous” in the everyday sense of occurring
without any physical interaction. Although the term remains useful
phenomenologically, it is potentially misleading because the underlying
mechanism is now understood differently. In QED, an excited atom interacts continuously
with the electromagnetic field, including the zero-point (vacuum) fluctuations.
These vacuum fluctuations can induce the atom to transition to a lower energy
state, thereby emitting a photon. In this sense, spontaneous emission is not
literally uncaused, but it arises from the interaction between matter and the
quantum vacuum field. For this reason, some physicists have described the
process as “vacuum-stimulated emission” (Milonni, 1984). In other words,
spontaneous emission can be viewed as “stimulated emission driven by the
zero-point fluctuations of the vacuum,” though this perspective remains a
useful heuristic since vacuum fluctuations are virtual rather than real photons.
“Einstein assumed that Planck’s final formula was
right, and he used that formula to obtain some new information, previously
unknown, about the interaction of radiation with matter (Feynman et al.,
1963).”
In his 1917 paper, Einstein writes, “Planck's formula
could be derived in an astonishingly simple and general way. It was obtained
from the condition that the internal energy distribution of the molecules
demanded by quantum theory, should follow purely from an emission and
absorption of radiation.” He then explains his assumption of isotropy (or
pseudo-isotropy using time-averages), which allows the coefficients Bmn and Bnm to be independent
of direction. Even if a molecule is anisotropic, the molecule’s orientation
fluctuates randomly over time, so that directional effects vanish on average
(pseudo-isotropy). The deeper significance of Einstein’s argument is that it
implicitly anticipates the modern quantum concept of radiation as photons
carrying momentum in definite directions. Once radiation is understood to
transfer directional momentum to atoms during emission or absorption, pseudo-isotropy
is no longer trivial: it becomes a statistical requirement ensuring that, in
thermal equilibrium, no direction is privileged on average.
2. Stimulated emission
“an emission proportional to the intensity of
light, called induced emission or sometimes stimulated
emission… (Feynman et al., 1963).”
Stimulated emission can be understood in terms of external
electromagnetic wave, thermal equilibrium, and Boltzmann distribution. Firstly,
stimulated emission is a quantum mechanical process when an external
electromagnetic wave—specifically a photon—interacts with an atom or molecule
that is already in a higher-energy excited state and releases a second photon.
This newly emitted photon is physically identical to the triggering
photon—sharing the exact same frequency, phase, polarization, and direction of
travel. Next, Einstein mathematically predicted this process by showing that it
is a strict requirement for thermodynamic equilibrium, so that a system can
maintain a stable energy balance according to Planck's radiation law. Under
normal circumstances dictated by the Boltzmann distribution, the population
density naturally favors the lower energy state. Ultimately, one "triggering"
photon goes in, and two identical, correlated photons come out, effectively
multiplying the light.
Although the underlying mechanism of a laser is
simulated emission, its operating conditions differ fundamentally from the
thermal equilibrium assumed in Einstein’s (1917) theory of radiation. In
Einstein’s framework, atomic populations obey the Boltzmann distribution, so lower
energy states are naturally more populated than excited states (N1 >
N2).
A laser, however, operates far from
thermal equilibrium. An external pump source continuously supplies energy to
the lasing medium, driving the atoms into a non-equilibrium condition known as
population inversion (N2
> N1).
Thus, ordinary stimulated emission and laser action are “same same but
different”: both arise from the same quantum transition process, but population
inversion in a laser helps to sustain stimulated emission to achieve coherent
light amplification. This inversion is possible by using a lasing medium (e.g.,
a gas or semiconductor) with metastable states, whose relatively longer lifetimes
allow excited atoms to accumulate rather than decaying immediately by
spontaneous emission.
3. Absorption
“Thus Einstein assumed that there are three kinds of
processes: an absorption proportional to the intensity of light, an emission
proportional to the intensity of light, called induced emission or
sometimes stimulated emission, and a spontaneous emission
independent of light (Feynman et al. 1963).”
Absorption occurs
when an atom or molecule in a lower energy state absorbs a photon whose energy
matches the energy difference between two energy levels, thereby transitioning
to a higher energy state. In Einstein’s theory, the absorption rate is
proportional to the intensity (spectral density) of the radiation field.
Microscopically, absorption arises from the interaction between the
electromagnetic field and the atom’s charged constituents, which transfer
quantized energy to the atom. In reality, absorption is not perfectly
monochromatic but occurs over a finite frequency range depending on thermal
motion (Doppler broadening) and collisional effects. The probability of a
transition is constrained by selection rules and depends on photon polarization
and molecular orientation. For the system to remain in dynamic equilibrium, the
overall rates of upward and downward transitions must balance exactly:
Rate of upward
transitions (1 ® 2) = Rate of
downward transitions (2 ® 1)
This condition is
known as the principle of detailed balance, which states that at
equilibrium, every microscopic process transferring energy in one direction
must be balanced by the corresponding reverse process occurring at the same
average rate.
“This
is not the only way one can arrange to keep the numbers of atoms in the various
levels constant, but it is the way it actually works. That every process must,
in thermal equilibrium, be balanced by its exact opposite is called the principle
of detailed balancing (Feynman et al., 1963).”
In his 1917 paper,
Einstein did not explicitly use the term “principle of detailed balancing,” but
mentions the photochemical principle of equivalence, Doppler Principle, and
Boltzmann’s principle. The photochemical law of equivalence states that each
absorbed photon activates one atom or molecule in a photochemical reaction.
Einstein also invoked the Doppler principle to account for frequency shifts
caused by the thermal motion of atoms, thereby broadening spectral lines. At
the same time, he employed Boltzmann’s principle to relate the relative
populations of energy levels at thermal equilibrium. However, Einstein
effectively imposed a condition of dynamic equilibrium, which was later
formalized and named as the “principle of detailed balancing” by Richard C.
Tolman. By combining these principles, Einstein showed that the interplay between
absorption, spontaneous emission, and stimulated emission must reproduce the
Planck’s blackbody spectrum while maintaining thermodynamic equilibrium.
Perhaps Feynman could have concluded the section with
the famous dialogue with his father, because it captures a genuine conceptual
puzzle about spontaneous emission: how can a photon be created
during an atomic transition if it was not already “inside” the atom beforehand?
This exchange reveals not a failure of physics, but the limits of classical
intuition when applied to quantum processes.
You might
wonder what he got out of it all. I went to MIT. I went to Princeton. I came
home, and he said, "Now you've got a science education. I have always
wanted to know something that I have never understood, and so, my son, I want
you to explain it to me."
I said yes.
He said,
"I understand that they say that light is emitted from an atom when it
goes from one state to another, from an excited state to a state of lower
energy.
I said,
"That's right."
"And light
is a kind of particle, a photon, I think they call it."
"Yes."
"So if the
photon comes out of the atom when it goes from the excited to the lower state,
the photon must have been in the atom in the excited state."
I said,
"Well, no."
He said,
"Well, how do you look at it so you can think of a particle photon coming
out without it having been in there in the excited state?"
I thought a few
minutes, and I said, "I'm sorry; I don't know. I can't explain it to
you." He was very disappointed after all these years and years of trying
to teach me something, that it came out with such poor results (Feynman, 1969).
Feynman’s admission that he could not provide an
intuitive picture of the process exposes a deeper truth. Spontaneous emission,
stimulated emission, and absorption all resist simple classical visualization.
In spontaneous emission, a photon appears without an obvious physical cause; in
stimulated emission, one photon appears to generate another identical photon;
and in absorption, a photon seems to “disappear” into the atom.
His father’s seemingly simple question exposes the
limits of everyday mental models; even after mastering the mathematics of
Einstein’s coefficients, we cannot give a fully intuitive “picture” of these
processes, only a consistent set of probabilistic rules that work. Thus, the
dialogue serves as a humbling reminder that even when quantum phenomena can be
controlled and exploited—in lasers, solar cells, and quantum optics—the
underlying nature of what “really happens” during a quantum transition still
challenges human intuition.
Key Takeaways:
The key insight behind absorption, spontaneous
emission, and stimulated emission is that they are three complementary quantum
processes governing how matter exchanges energy with radiation through
transitions between discrete energy levels. Absorption occurs when an atom or
molecule in a lower energy state absorbs a photon whose energy matches the gap
between two allowed levels, thereby moving to a higher state. Spontaneous
emission occurs when an excited atom decays randomly to a lower state and emits
a photon even in the absence of externally applied radiation; in modern Quantum
Electrodynamics, this process is understood as arising from the interaction
between the atom and vacuum fluctuations of the quantized electromagnetic
field. Stimulated emission occurs when an incoming photon induces an excited
atom to emit a second photon with the same frequency, phase, polarization, and
direction as the first photon.
The Moral of the Lesson:
In the early 1950s, Charles H. Townes devoted enormous
time, effort, and funding to developing the maser, a device designed to amplify
microwaves through stimulated emission and the technology precursor to the
laser. After nearly two years of relentless work without a functioning
prototype, Townes was confronted by two of Columbia University’s most eminent physicists:
Isidor Isaac Rabi and Polykarp Kusch.
Rabi and Kusch were leading authorities on molecular
beam techniques—the very experimental methods Townes was relying on—and both
later received the Nobel Prize in Physics.
According to Townes, they bluntly advised him to abandon his project: “You
should stop the work you are doing. It isn’t going to work. You know it’s not
going to work. We know it’s not going to work. You’re wasting money. Just stop!
(Townes, 1999, p. 65).” They were concerned that his prolonged failure would affect
their research funding from the same source. However, Townes trusted his
calculations and persisted. Just three months later, his team successfully
built the first operating maser.
Remarkably, Rabi and Kusch were not the only skeptics.
Prominent physicists such as Niels Bohr and John von Neumann also doubted the
maser’s feasibility, while some questioning whether it violated Heisenberg’s
uncertainty principle. Townes’s success remains as a timeless lesson in science:
even the judgment of the most celebrated experts must ultimately be tested
against experimental evidence. Scientific authority can guide inquiry, but
nature itself remains the final arbiter.
Hindsight Bias and
the Illusion of Simplicity
Years later, Townes recalled a conversation with
Feynman about the laser. Feynman remarked that the hallmark of a truly great
idea is that when people hear it, they respond by saying, “Gee, I could
have thought of that (Townes, 1999, p. 10).” In retrospect, the
laser appears elegant and inevitable, yet this great idea was initially
dismissed by many prominent physicists, including Nobel laureates. Hindsight
tends to compress intellectual struggle into inevitability, making
revolutionary ideas appear far simpler than they actually were at the time of
discovery.
The Hidden Genius of the Fabry-Pérot
Cavity
Part of the skepticism is understandable when one
recognizes that the laser was far more than a synthesis of principles such as
the photochemical principle of equivalence and Boltzmann’s principle. One of
the breakthroughs lay in engineering: scaling the maser from microwaves to
visible light required confining light within a Fabry‑Perot cavity. This cavity
uses two nearly parallel, partially reflective mirrors to bounce light back and
forth repeatedly, producing multiple‑beam interference. Its effectiveness is
not obvious: one might naïvely think that multiple reflections would likely
scatter or weaken light, instead of sharpening it coherently. Moreover, the
mirrors must be kept parallel to within a fraction of a wavelength—a
requirement far more stringent than ordinary experience would suggests. By transforming
a poorly understood optical phenomenon into a practical tool, Townes and team did
more than invent a new device. They showed that a revolutionary scientific idea
does not necessarily appear revolutionary at first; more often, it may
initially seem impractical, counterintuitive, or even impossible.
Review Questions:
1. How would you explain spontaneous emission: as
“stimulated emission driven by vacuum fluctuations” (Modern view) or as “emission
without excitation from external causes” (Einstein’s view)?
2. What are the key similarities and differences
between stimulated emission as described in Einstein’s 1917 radiation theory
and the conditions required for laser operation?
3. Using everyday language that Feynman’s father could understand, how would you explain the absorption of radiation—that is, how an atom absorbs a photon and jumps to a higher energy state?
P.S. The evolution of the laser from Einstein’s 1917
theory of radiation to modern semiconductor lithography represents a premier
arc in applied physics. Today's advanced chip manufacturing relies primarily on
laser-produced plasma (LPP) extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography. In this
process, high-power pulsed lasers vaporize tens of thousands of tin droplets
per second, generating a hot plasma that emits a broad spectrum, from which the
13.5 nm wavelength is selectively collected by multilayer mirrors. This
ultra-short wavelength is the enabling technology required to pattern the
microscopic features on modern microchips. What began as a quantum insight is
now the physical foundation driving global computing, artificial intelligence,
and the digital economy.
References:
Einstein, A. (1917). On the quantum theory of
radiation. Physikalische Zeitschrift, 18(121), 167-83.
Feynman, R. P.
(1969).
What Is Science?. The Physics Teacher, 7(6), 313–320.
Feynman, R. P., Leighton, R. B., & Sands, M. (1963). The Feynman Lectures on Physics, Vol I: Mainly mechanics, radiation, and heat. Reading,
MA: Addison-Wesley.
Milonni,
P. W. (1984). Why spontaneous emission? American Journal of Physics, 52,
340-343.
Townes, C. H. (1999). How the laser happened:
adventures of a scientist. Oxford University Press.