The quantization of the electromagnetic field means that an electromagnetic field consists of discrete energy parcels called photons. Photons are massless particles of definite energy, definite momentum, and definite spin.
To explain the photoelectric effect, Albert Einstein assumed heuristically in 1905 that an electromagnetic field consists of particles of energy of amount hν, where h is Planck's constant and ν is the wave frequency. In 1927 Paul A. M. Dirac was able to weave the photon concept into the fabric of the new quantum mechanics and to describe the interaction of photons with matter. He applied a technique which is now generally called second quantization,
although this term is somewhat of a misnomer for electromagnetic
fields, because they are solutions of the classical Maxwell equations.
In Dirac's theory the fields are quantized for the first time and it is
also the first time that Planck's constant enters the expressions. In
his original work, Dirac took the phases of the different
electromagnetic modes (Fourier components of the field) and the mode energies as dynamic variables to quantize (i.e., he reinterpreted them as operators and postulated commutation relations between them). At present it is more common to quantize the Fourier components of the vector potential. This is what is done below.
A quantum mechanical photon state belonging to mode is introduced below, and it is shown that it has the following properties:
These equations say respectively: a photon has zero rest mass; the photon energy is hν = hc|k| (k is the wave vector, c is speed of light); its electromagnetic momentum is ℏk [ℏ=h/(2π)]; the polarization μ = ±1 is the eigenvalue of the z-component of the photon spin.
Second quantization
Second
quantization starts with an expansion of a scalar or vector field (or
wave functions) in a basis consisting of a complete set of functions.
These expansion functions depend on the coordinates of a single
particle. The coefficients multiplying the basis functions are
interpreted as operators and (anti)commutation relations between these new operators are imposed, commutation relations for bosons and anticommutation relations for fermions
(nothing happens to the basis functions themselves). By doing this,
the expanded field is converted into a fermion or boson operator field.
The expansion coefficients have been promoted from ordinary numbers to
operators, creation and annihilation operators.
A creation operator creates a particle in the corresponding basis
function and an annihilation operator annihilates a particle in this
function.
In the case of EM fields the required expansion of the field is the Fourier expansion.
Electromagnetic field and vector potential
As the term suggests, an EM field consists of two vector fields, an electric field and a magnetic field. Both are time-dependent vector fields that in vacuum depend on a third vector field (the vector potential), as well as a scalar field
where denotes the complex conjugate of . The wave vector k gives the propagation direction of the corresponding Fourier component (a polarized monochromatic wave) of A(r,t); the length of the wave vector is
with ν the frequency of the mode. In this summation k runs over all integers, both positive and negative. (The component of Fourier basis is complex conjugate of component of as is real.) The components of the vector k have discrete values (a consequence of the boundary condition that A has the same value on opposite walls of the box):
Two e(μ) ("polarization vectors") are
conventional unit vectors for left and right hand circular polarized
(LCP and RCP) EM waves (See Jones calculus or Jones vector, Jones calculus) and perpendicular to k. They are related to the orthonormal Cartesian vectors ex and ey through a unitary transformation,
The k-th Fourier component of A is a vector perpendicular to k and hence is a linear combination of e(1) and e(−1). The superscript μ indicates a component along e(μ).
Clearly, the (discrete infinite) set of Fourier coefficients and are variables defining the vector potential. In the following they will be promoted to operators.
By using field equations of and in terms of above, electric and magnetic fields are
By using identity ( and are vectors) and as each mode has single frequency dependence.
Quantization of EM field
The best known example of quantization is the replacement of the time-dependent linear momentum of a particle by the rule
Note that Planck's constant is introduced here and that the
time-dependence of the classical expression is not taken over in the
quantum mechanical operator (this is true in the so-called Schrödinger picture).
For the EM field we do something similar. The quantity is the electric constant, which appears here because of the use of electromagnetic SI units. The quantization rules are:
subject to the boson commutation relations
The square brackets indicate a commutator, defined by for any two quantum mechanical operators A and B. The introduction of Planck's constant is essential in the transition from a classical to a quantum theory. The factor
is introduced to give the Hamiltonian (energy operator) a simple form, see below.
The quantized fields (operator fields) are the following
where ω = c |k| = ck.
Hamiltonian of the field
The classical Hamiltonian has the form
The right-hand-side is easily obtained by first using
(can be derived from Euler equation and trigonometric orthogonality) where k is wavenumber for wave confined within the box of V = L × L × L as described above and second, using ω = kc.
Substitution of the field operators into the classical Hamiltonian gives the Hamilton operator of the EM field,
The second equality follows by use of the third of the boson commutation relations from above with k′ = k and μ′ = μ. Note again that ℏω = hν = ℏc|k| and remember that ω depends on k, even though it is not explicit in the notation. The notation ω(k) could have been introduced, but is not common as it clutters the equations.
Digression: harmonic oscillator
The second quantized treatment of the one-dimensional quantum harmonic oscillator
is a well-known topic in quantum mechanical courses. We digress and
say a few words about it. The harmonic oscillator Hamiltonian has the
form
where ω ≡ 2πν is the fundamental frequency of the oscillator. The ground state of the oscillator is designated by ; and is referred to as the "vacuum state". It can be shown that is an excitation operator, it excites from an n fold excited state to an n + 1 fold excited state:
In particular: and
Since harmonic oscillator energies are equidistant, the n-fold excited state ; can be looked upon as a single state containing n particles (sometimes called vibrons) all of energy hν. These particles are bosons. For obvious reason the excitation operator is called a creation operator.
From the commutation relation follows that the Hermitian adjoint de-excites: in particular so that For obvious reason the de-excitation operator is called an annihilation operator.
By mathematical induction the following "differentiation rule", that will be needed later, is easily proved,
Suppose now we have a number of non-interacting (independent)
one-dimensional harmonic oscillators, each with its own fundamental
frequency ωi . Because the oscillators are independent, the Hamiltonian is a simple sum:
By substituting for we see that the Hamiltonian of the EM field can be considered a Hamiltonian of independent oscillators of energy ω = |k|c oscillating along direction e(μ) with μ = ±1.
Photon number states (Fock states)
The quantized EM field has a vacuum (no photons) state . The application to it of, say,
gives a quantum state of m photons in mode (k, μ) and n photons in mode (k′, μ′).
The proportionality symbol is used because the state on the left-hand
is not normalized to unity, whereas the state on the right-hand may be
normalized.
The operator
is the number operator. When acting on a quantum mechanical photon number state, it returns the number of photons in mode (k, μ).
This also holds when the number of photons in this mode is zero, then
the number operator returns zero. To show the action of the number
operator on a one-photon ket, we consider
i.e., a number operator of mode (k, μ) returns zero if
the mode is unoccupied and returns unity if the mode is singly occupied.
To consider the action of the number operator of mode (k, μ) on a n-photon ket of the same mode, we drop the indices k and μ and consider
Use the "differentiation rule" introduced earlier and it follows that
A photon number state (or a Fock state) is an eigenstate of the number operator. This is why the formalism described here is often referred to as the occupation number representation.
Photon energy
Earlier the Hamiltonian,
was introduced. The zero of energy can be shifted, which leads to an expression in terms of the number operator,
The effect of H on a single-photon state is
Apparently, the single-photon state is an eigenstate of H and ℏω = hν is the corresponding energy. In the very same way
Example photon density
The electromagnetic energy density created by a 100 kW radio transmitting station is computed in the article on the electromagnetic wave (where?) ; the energy density estimate at 5 km from the station was 2.1 × 10−10 J/m3. Is quantum mechanics needed to describe the station's broadcast?
The classical approximation to EM radiation is good when the number of photons is much larger than unity in the volume where λ is the length of the radio waves. In that case quantum fluctuations are negligible and cannot be heard.
Suppose the radio station broadcasts at ν = 100 MHz, then it is sending out photons with an energy content of νh = 1 × 108 × 6.6 × 10−34 = 6.6 × 10−26 J, where h is Planck's constant. The wavelength of the station is λ = c/ν = 3 m, so that λ/(2π) = 48 cm and the volume is 0.109 m3. The energy content of this volume element is 2.1 × 10−10 × 0.109 = 2.3 × 10−11 J, which amounts to 3.4 × 1014 photons per Obviously, 3.4 × 1014
> 1 and hence quantum effects do not play a role; the waves emitted
by this station are well-described by the classical limit and quantum
mechanics is not needed.
Photon momentum
Introducing the Fourier expansion of the electromagnetic field into the classical form
yields
Quantization gives
The term 1/2 could be dropped, because when one sums over the allowed k, k cancels with −k. The effect of PEM on a single-photon state is
Apparently, the single-photon state is an eigenstate of the momentum operator, and ℏk is the eigenvalue (the momentum of a single photon).
Photon mass
The photon having non-zero linear momentum, one could imagine that it has a non-vanishing rest mass m0, which is its mass at zero speed. However, we will now show that this is not the case: m0 = 0.
Since the photon propagates with the speed of light, special relativity is called for. The relativistic expressions for energy and momentum squared are,
From p2/E2,
Use
and it follows that
so that m0 = 0.
Photon spin
The photon can be assigned a triplet spin with spin quantum number S = 1. This is similar to, say, the nuclear spin of the 14N isotope, but with the important difference that the state with MS = 0 is zero, only the states with MS = ±1 are non-zero.
Define spin operators:
The two operators between the two orthogonal unit vectors are dyadic products. The unit vectors are perpendicular to the propagation direction k (the direction of the z axis, which is the spin quantization axis).
The spin operators satisfy the usual angular momentum commutation relations
Indeed, use the dyadic product property
because ez is of unit length. In this manner,
By inspection it follows that
and therefore μ labels the photon spin,
Because the vector potential A is a transverse field, the photon has no forward (μ = 0) spin component.
The potential impact of thiomersal on autism has been
investigated extensively. Multiple lines of scientific evidence have
shown that thiomersal does not cause autism. For example, the clinical
symptoms of mercury poisoning differ significantly from those of autism.
In addition, multiple population studies have found no association
between thiomersal and autism, and rates of autism have continued to
increase despite removal of thiomersal from vaccines. Thus, major scientific and medical bodies such as the Institute of Medicine and World Health Organization (WHO) as well as governmental agencies such as the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
reject any role for thiomersal in autism or other neurodevelopmental
disorders. In spite of the consensus of the scientific community, some
parents and advocacy groups continue to contend that thiomersal is
linked to autism and the claim is still stated as if it were fact in anti-vaccination propaganda, notably that of Robert F. Kennedy Jr., through his group Children's Health Defense. Thiomersal is no longer used in most children's vaccines in the United States, with the exception of some types of flu shots. While exposure to mercury may result in damage to brain, kidneys, and developing fetus, the scientific consensus is that thiomersal has no such effects.
This controversy has caused harm due to parents attempting to
treat their autistic children with unproven and possibly dangerous
treatments, discouraging parents from vaccinating their children due to
fears about thiomersal toxicity and diverting resources away from research into more promising areas for the cause of autism.
Thousands of lawsuits have been filed in the U.S. to seek damages from
alleged toxicity from vaccines, including those purportedly caused by
thiomersal. US courts have ruled against multiple representative test cases involving thiomersal. A 2011 journal article described the vaccine-autism connection as "perhaps, the most damaging medical hoax of the last 100 years".
History
Thiomersal (also spelled thimerosal, especially in the United States) is an organomercury compound used as a preservative in vaccines to prevent bacterial and fungal contamination. Following a mandated review of mercury-containing food and drugs in 1999, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the American Academy of Pediatrics
(AAP) determined that under the existing vaccination schedule "some
children could be exposed to a cumulative level of mercury over the
first 6 months of life that exceeds one of the federal guidelines on
methyl mercury."
They asked vaccine makers to remove thiomersal from vaccines as quickly
as possible as a precautionary measure, and it was rapidly phased out
of most US and EU vaccines, but is still used in multi-dose vials of flu vaccines in the U.S. No vaccines in the European Union currently contain thiomersal as a preservative.
In the context of perceived increased autism rates and increased number
of vaccines in the childhood vaccination schedule, some parents
believed the action to remove thiomersal was an indication that the
preservative caused autism.
It was introduced as a preservative in the 1930s to prevent the
growth of infectious organisms such as bacteria and fungi, and has been
in use in vaccines and other products such as immunoglobulin
preparations and ophthalmic and nasal solutions. Vaccine manufacturers
have used preservatives to prevent microbial growth during the
manufacturing process or when packaged as "multi-dose" products to allow
for multiple punctures of the same vial to dispense multiple
vaccinations with less fear of contamination. After the FDA Modernization Act of 1997
mandated a review and risk assessment of all mercury-containing food
and drugs, vaccine manufacturers responded to FDA requests made in
December 1998 and April 1999 to provide detailed information about the
thiomersal content of their preparations.
A review of the data showed that while the vaccine schedule for infants did not exceed FDA, Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR), or WHO guidelines on mercury exposure, it could have exceeded Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) standards for the first six months of life, depending on the vaccine formulation and the weight of the infant. The review also highlighted difficulty interpreting toxicity of the ethylmercury in thiomersal because guidelines for mercury toxicity were based primarily on studies of methylmercury, a different mercury compound with different toxicologic properties.
Multiple meetings were scheduled among various government officials and
scientists from multiple agencies to discuss the appropriate response
to this evidence. There was a wide range of opinions on the urgency and
significance of the safety of thiomersal, with some toxicologists suggesting there was no clear evidence that thiomersal was harmful and other participants like Neal Halsey,
director of the Institute of Vaccine Safety at Johns Hopkins School of
Public Health, strongly advocating removal of thiomersal from vaccines
due to possible safety risks. In the process of forming the response to
this information, the participants attempted to strike a balance between
acknowledging possible harm from thiomersal and the risks involved if
childhood vaccinations were delayed or stopped.
Upon conclusion of their review, the FDA, in conjunction with the other members of the US Public Health Service (USPHS), the National Institutes of Health (NIH), CDC and Health Resources and Services Administration
(HRSA), in a joint statement with the AAP in July 1999 concluded that
there was "no evidence of harm caused by doses of thimerosal found in
vaccines, except for local hypersensitivity reactions."
Despite the lack of convincing evidence of toxicity of thiomersal
when used as a vaccine preservative, the USPHS and AAP determined that
thiomersal should be removed from vaccines as a purely precautionary
measure. This action was based on the precautionary principle,
which assumes that there is no harm in exercising caution even if it
later turns out to be unnecessary. The CDC and AAP reasoned that despite
the lack of evidence of significant harm in the use of thiomersal in
vaccines, the removal of this preservative would increase the public
confidence in the safety of vaccines. Although thiomersal was largely removed from routine infant vaccines by summer 2001 in the U.S., some vaccines continue to contain non-trace amounts of thiomersal, mainly in multi-dose vaccines targeted against influenza, meningococcal disease and tetanus.
In 2004 Quackwatch
posted an article saying that chelation therapy has been falsely
promoted as effective against autism, and that practitioners falsified
diagnoses of metal poisoning to "trick" parents into having their
children undergo the process. As of 2008, between 2–8% of children with autism had undergone the therapy.
Rationale for concern
Although intended to increase public confidence in vaccinations, the
decision to remove thiomersal instead led to some parents suspecting
thiomersal as a cause of autism. This concern over a vaccine-autism link
grew from a confluence of several underlying factors. First,
methylmercury had for decades been the subject of widespread
environmental and media concern after two highly publicized episodes of
poisonings in the 1950s and 1960s in Minamata Bay, Japan from industrial waste and in the 1970s in Iraq from fungicide contamination of wheat.
These incidents led to new research on methylmercury safety and
culminated in the publication of an array of confusing recommendations
by public health agencies in the 1990s warning against methylmercury
exposure in adults and pregnant women, which ensured a continued high
public awareness of mercury toxicity. Second, the vaccine schedule for
infants expanded in the 1990s to include more vaccines, some of which,
including the Hib vaccine, DTaP vaccine and hepatitis B vaccine, could have contained thiomersal. Third, the number of diagnoses of autism
grew in the 1990s, leading parents of these children to search for an
explanation for the apparent rise in diagnoses, including considering
possible environmental factors.
The dramatic increase in reported cases of autism during the 1990s and
early 2000s is largely attributable to changes in diagnostic practices,
referral patterns, availability of services, age at diagnosis, and
public awareness, and it is unknown whether autism's true prevalence increased during the period.
Nevertheless, some parents believed that there was a growing "autism
epidemic" and connected these three factors to conclude that the
increase in number of vaccines, and specifically the mercury in
thiomersal in those vaccines, was causing a dramatic increase in the incidence of autism.
Advocates of a thiomersal-autism link also relied on indirect evidence from the scientific literature, including analogy with neurotoxic
effects of other mercury compounds, the reported epidemiologic
association between autism and vaccine use, and extrapolation from in vitro experiments and animal studies. Studies conducted by Mark Geier
and his son David Geier have been the most frequently cited research by
parents advocating a link between thiomersal and autism. This research by Geier has received considerable criticism
for methodological problems in his research, including not presenting
methods and statistical analyses to others for verification, improperly analyzing data taken from Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System,
as well as either mislabelling or confusing fundamental statistical
terms in his papers, leading to results that were "uninterpretable".
Publicity of concern
Several months after the recommendation to have thiomersal removed
from vaccines was published, a speculative article was published in Medical Hypotheses, a non-peer-reviewed journal, by parents who launched the parental advocacy group SafeMinds to promote the theory that thiomersal caused autism. The controversy began to gain legitimacy in the eyes of the public
and gained widening support within certain elements in the autism
advocacy community as well as in the political arena, with U.S.
Representative Dan Burton openly supporting this movement and holding a number of Congressional hearings on the subject.
Further support for the association between autism and thiomersal appeared in an article by Robert F. Kennedy Jr. in the magazines Rolling Stone and Salon.com alleging a government conspiracy at a CDC meeting to conceal the dangers of thiomersal to protect the pharmaceutical industry, and a book written by David Kirby, Evidence of Harm,
dramatizing the lives of parents of autistic children, with both
authors participating in media interviews to promote their work and the
controversy. Although the allegations by Kennedy were denied and a US Senate committee investigation later found no evidence to substantiate the most serious allegations, the story had already been well publicized by leveraging Kennedy's celebrity. Salon
magazine subsequently amended Kennedy's article five times due to
factual errors and later retracted it completely on 16 January 2011,
stating that the works of critics of the article and evidence of the
flaws in the science connecting autism and vaccines undermined the value
of the article to the editors.
Meanwhile, during this time of increased media publicity of the
controversy, public health officials and institutions did little to
rebut the concerns and speculative theories being offered. Media attention and polarization of the debate has also been fueled by personal injury lawyers who took out full-page ads in prominent newspapers and offered financial support for expert witnesses who dissented from the scientific consensus that there is no convincing evidence for a link between thiomersal and autism. Paul Offit, a leading vaccine researcher and advocate, has said that the media has a tendency to provide false balance
by perpetually presenting both sides of an issue even when only one
side is supported by the evidence and thereby giving a platform for the
spread of misinformation.
Despite the consensus from experts that there is no link between
thiomersal and autism, many parents continue to believe that such a link
exists. These parents share the viewpoint that autism is not just treatable, but curable through "biomedical" interventions
and have been frustrated by the lack of progress from more "mainline"
scientists in finding this cure. Instead, they have supported an
alternative community of like-minded parents, physicians and scientists
who promote this belief. This mindset has taught these parents to
challenge the expertise from the mainstream scientific community. Parents have also been influenced by an extensive network of anti-vaccination organizations such as Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s Children's Health Defense and a large number of online anti-vaccination websites that present themselves as an alternative source for evidence using pseudoscientific
claims. These websites use emotional appeals to gather support and
frame the controversy as an adversarial dispute between parents and a
conspiracy of doctors and scientists. Advocates for a thiomersal-autism link have also relied on celebrities like model Jenny McCarthy and information presented on Don Imus' Imus in the Morning
radio show to persuade the public to their cause, instead of relying
only on "dry" scientific papers and scientists. McCarthy has published a
book describing her personal experience with her autistic son and
appeared on The Oprah Winfrey Show to promote the hypothesis of vaccines causing autism. Bitterness over this issue has led to numerous threats made against the CDC as well as researchers like Offit, with increased security placed by the CDC in response to these threats.
Scientific evaluation
Rationale for doubting link
Various lines of evidence undermine a proposed link between
thiomersal and autism. For example, although advocates of a
thiomersal-autism link consider autism a form of "mercury poisoning,"
the typical symptoms of mercury toxicity are significantly different from symptoms seen in autism. Likewise, the neuroanatomic and histopathologic
features of the brains of patients who have mercury poisoning, both
with methylmercury as well as ethylmercury, have significant differences
from the brains of people with autism. Previous episodes of widespread
mercury toxicity in a population such as in Minamata Bay,
Japan would also be expected to lead to documentation of a significant
rise in autism or autism-like behavior in children should autism be
caused by mercury poisoning. However, research on several episodes of
acute and chronic mercury poisoning have not documented any such rise in
autism-like behavior. Although some parents cite an association between
the timing of onset of autistic symptoms with the timing of
vaccinations as evidence of an environmental cause such as thiomersal,
this line of reasoning can be misleading. Associations such as these do not establish causation
as the two occurring together may be only coincidental in nature. Also,
genetic disorders that have no environmental triggers such as Rett syndrome and Huntington's disease
nevertheless have specific ages when they begin to show symptoms,
suggesting specific ages of onset of symptoms does not necessarily
require an environmental cause.
Although the concern for a thiomersal-autism link was originally
derived from indirect evidence based on the known potent neurotoxic
effects of methylmercury, recent studies show these feared effects were
likely overestimated. Ethylmercury, such as in thiomersal, clears much
faster from the body after administration than methylmercury, suggesting
total mercury exposure over time is much less with ethylmercury.
Currently used methods of estimating brain deposition of mercury likely
overestimates the amounts deposited due to ethylmercury, and
ethylmercury also decomposes quicker in the brain than methylmercury,
suggesting a lower risk of brain damage. These findings show that the
assumptions that originally led to concern about the toxicity of
ethylmercury, which were based on direct comparison to methylmercury,
were flawed.
Population studies
Multiple studies have been performed on data from large populations
of children to study the relationship between the use of vaccines
containing thiomersal, and autism and other neurodevelopmental
disorders. Almost all of these studies have found no association between
thiomersal-containing vaccines (TCVs) and autism, and studies done
after the removal of thiomersal from vaccines have nevertheless shown
autism rates continuing to increase. The only epidemiologic research
that has found a purported link between TCVs and autism has been
conducted by Mark Geier, whose flawed research has not been given any
weight by independent reviews.
In Europe, a cohort study of 467,450 Danish children found no association between TCVs and autism or autism spectrum disorders (ASDs), nor any dose-response relationship between thiomersal and ASDs that would be suggestive of toxic exposure. An ecological
analysis that studied 956 Danish children diagnosed with autism
likewise did not show an association between autism and thiomersal. A retrospective cohort study on 109,863 children in the United Kingdom found no association between TCVs and autism, but a possible increased risk for tics. Analysis in this study also showed a possible protective effect with respect to general developmental disorders, attention-deficit disorder, and otherwise unspecified developmental delay. Another UK study based on a prospective cohort
of 13,617 children likewise found more associated benefits than risks
from thiomersal exposure with respect to developmental disorders. Because the Danish and UK studies involved only diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis (DTP) or diphtheria-tetanus (DT) vaccines, they are less relevant for the higher thiomersal exposure levels that occurred in the U.S.
In North America, a Canadian study of 27,749 children in Quebec showed that thiomersal was unrelated to the increasing trend in pervasive developmental disorders
(PDDs). In fact, the study noted that rates of PDDs were higher in the
birth cohorts with no thiomersal when compared to those with medium or
high levels of exposure. A study performed in the US which analyzed data from 78,829 children enrolled in HMOs taken from the Vaccine Safety Datalink
(VSD) did not show any consistent association between TCVs and
neurodevelopmental outcomes, noting different results from data in
different HMOs.
A study performed in California found that removal of thiomersal from
vaccines did not decrease the rates of autism, suggesting that
thiomersal could not be the primary cause of autism. A study on children from Denmark, Sweden and California likewise argued against TCVs being causally associated with autism.
Scientific consensus
In 2001 the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the National Institutes of Health asked the U.S. National Academy of Sciences'
(NAS) Institute of Medicine to establish an independent expert
committee to review hypotheses about existing and emerging immunization
safety concerns. This initial report found that based on indirect and
incomplete evidence available at the time, there was inadequate evidence
to accept or reject a thiomersal-autism link, though it was
biologically plausible.
Since this report was released, several independent reviews have
examined the body of published research for a possible thiomersal-autism
link by examining the theoretical mechanisms of thiomersal causing harm
and by reviewing the in vitro, animal, and population studies
that have been published. These reviews determined that no evidence
exists to establish thiomersal as the cause of autism or other
neurodevelopmental disorders.
The scientific consensus on the subject is reflected in a
follow-up report that was subsequently published in 2004 by the
Institute of Medicine, which took into account new data that had been
published since the 2001 report. The committee noted, in response to
those who cite in vitro or animal models as evidence for the link between autism and thiomersal:
However, the experiments showing effects of thimerosal on
biochemical pathways in cell culture systems and showing abnormalities
in the immune system or metal metabolism in people with autism are
provocative; the autism research community should consider the
appropriate composition of the autism research portfolio with some of
these new findings in mind. However, these experiments do not provide
evidence of a relationship between vaccines or thimerosal and autism.
In the absence of experimental or human evidence that vaccination
(either the MMR vaccine or the preservative thimerosal) affects
metabolic, developmental, immune, or other physiological or molecular
mechanisms that are causally related to the development of autism, the
committee concludes that the hypotheses generated to date are
theoretical only.
The committee concludes:
Thus, based on this body of evidence, the committee
concludes that the evidence favors rejection of a causal relationship
between thimerosal-containing vaccines and autism.
A 2011 journal article reflects this point of view and described
the vaccine-autism connection as "the most damaging medical hoax of the
last 100 years".
Consequences
The suggestion that thiomersal has contributed to autism and other
neurodevelopmental disorders has had a number of effects. Public health
officials believe fear driven by advocates of a thiomersal-autism link
has caused parents to avoid vaccination or adopt "made up" vaccination schedules that expose their children to increased risk from preventable diseases such as measles and pertussis.
Advocates of a thiomersal-autism link have also helped enact laws in
six states (California, Delaware, Illinois, Missouri, New York and
Washington) between 2004 and 2006 to limit the use of thiomersal given
to pregnant women and children, although later attempts in 2009 in
twelve other states failed to pass. These laws can be temporarily
suspended, but vaccine advocates doubt their utility given the lack of
evidence for danger with thiomersal in vaccines. Vaccine advocates are
also concerned that passage of such laws help fuel a backlash against
vaccination and contribute to doubts about the safety of vaccines that
are unwarranted.
During the period of time of removal of thiomersal, the CDC and AAP asked doctors to delay the birth dose of hepatitis B
vaccine in children not at risk for hepatitis. This decision, though
following the precautionary principle, nevertheless sparked confusion,
controversy and some harm. Approximately 10% of hospitals suspended the
use of hepatitis B vaccine for all newborns, and one child born to a
Michigan mother infected with hepatitis B virus died of it. Similarly, a study found that the number of hospitals who failed to properly vaccinate infants of hepatitis B seropositive
mothers rose by over 6 times. This is a potential negative outcome
given the high probability that infants who acquire hepatitis B
infection at birth will develop the infection in a chronic form and
possibly liver cancer.
The notion that thiomersal causes autism has led some parents to
have their children treated with costly and potentially dangerous
therapies such as chelation therapy, which is typically used to treat heavy metal poisoning, due to parental fears that autism is a form of "mercury poisoning".
As many as 2 to 8% of autistic children in the U.S., numbering as many
as several thousand children per year, receive mercury-chelating agents.
Although critics of using chelation therapy as an autism treatment
point to a lack of any evidence to support its use, hundreds of doctors
prescribe these medications despite possible side effects including
nutritional deficiencies as well as damage to the liver and kidney. The popularity of this therapy caused a "public health imperative" that led the U.S. National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) to commission a study about chelation in autism by studying DMSA,
a chelating agent used for lead poisoning, despite worries from critics
that there would be no chance it would show positive results and it
would be unlikely to convince parents to not use the therapy.
Ultimately, the study was halted due to ethical concerns that there
would be too much risk to children with autism who did not have toxic
levels of mercury or lead due to a new animal study showing possible
cognitive and emotional problems associated with DMSA. A 5-year-old autistic boy died from cardiac arrest immediately after receiving chelation therapy treatment using EDTA in 2005.
The notion has also diverted attention and resources away from efforts to determine the causes of autism.[30]
The 2004 Institute of Medicine report committee recommended that while
it supported "targeted research that focuses on better understanding the
disease of autism, from a public health perspective the committee does
not consider a significant investment in studies of the theoretical
vaccine-autism connection to be useful at this time." Alison Singer, a senior executive of Autism Speaks,
resigned from the group in 2009 in a dispute over whether to fund more
research on links between vaccination and autism, saying, "There isn't
an unlimited pot of money, and every dollar spent looking where we know
the answer isn't is one less dollar we have to spend where we might find
new answers."
From 1988 until August 2010, 5,632 claims relating to autism were made to Office of Special Masters of the U.S. Court of Federal Claims
(commonly known as the "Vaccine Court") which oversees vaccine injury
claims, of which one case has received compensation, 738 cases have been
dismissed with no compensations made, and with the remaining cases
pending. In the one case which received compensation, the U.S. government agreed to pay for injury to a child that had a pre-existing mitochondrial disorder
who developed autism-like symptoms after multiple vaccinations, some of
which included thiomersal. Citing the inability to rule out a role of
these vaccinations in exacerbating her underlying mitochondrial disorder
as the rationale for payment, CDC officials cautioned against
generalizing this one case to all autism-related vaccine cases as most
patients with autism do not have a mitochondrial disorder. In February 2009, this court also ruled on three autism-related cases,
each exploring different mechanisms that plaintiffs proposed linked
thiomersal-containing vaccines with autism. Three judges independently
found no evidence that vaccines caused autism and denied the plaintiffs
compensation. Since these same mechanisms formed the basis for the vast
majority of remaining autism-related vaccine injury cases, the chance
for compensation in any of these cases has significantly decreased. In March 2010, the court ruled in three other test cases that thiomersal-containing vaccines do not cause autism.
Radio astronomy is conducted using large radio antennas referred to as radio telescopes, that are either used singularly, or with multiple linked telescopes utilizing the techniques of radio interferometry and aperture synthesis. The use of interferometry allows radio astronomy to achieve high angular resolution,
as the resolving power of an interferometer is set by the distance
between its components, rather than the size of its components.
Radio astronomy differs from radar astronomy in that the former is a passive observation (i.e., receiving only) and the latter an active one (transmitting and receiving).
History
Before Jansky observed the Milky Way in the 1930s, physicists
speculated that radio waves could be observed from astronomical sources.
In the 1860s, James Clerk Maxwell's equations had shown that electromagnetic radiation is associated with electricity and magnetism, and could exist at any wavelength. Several attempts were made to detect radio emission from the Sun including an experiment by German astrophysicists Johannes Wilsing and Julius Scheiner in 1896 and a centimeter wave radiation apparatus set up by Oliver Lodge
between 1897 and 1900. These attempts were unable to detect any
emission due to technical limitations of the instruments. The discovery
of the radio reflecting ionosphere
in 1902, led physicists to conclude that the layer would bounce any
astronomical radio transmission back into space, making them
undetectable.
Karl Jansky made the discovery of the first astronomical radio source serendipitously in the early 1930s. As a newly hired radio engineer with Bell Telephone Laboratories, he was assigned the task to investigate static that might interfere with short wave transatlantic voice transmissions. Using a large directional antenna, Jansky noticed that his analog
pen-and-paper recording system kept recording a persistent repeating
signal or "hiss" of unknown origin. Since the signal peaked about every
24 hours, Jansky first suspected the source of the interference was the Sun
crossing the view of his directional antenna. Continued analysis,
however, showed that the source was not following the 24-hour daily
cycle of the Sun exactly, but instead repeating on a cycle of 23 hours
and 56 minutes. Jansky discussed the puzzling phenomena with his friend,
astrophysicist Albert Melvin Skellett, who pointed out that the
observed time between the signal peaks was the exact length of a sidereal day;
the time it took for "fixed" astronomical objects, such as a star, to
pass in front of the antenna every time the Earth rotated.
By comparing his observations with optical astronomical maps, Jansky
eventually concluded that the radiation source peaked when his antenna
was aimed at the densest part of the Milky Way in the constellation of Sagittarius.
Jansky announced his discovery at a meeting in Washington, D.C., in April 1933 and the field of radio astronomy was born.
In October 1933, his discovery was published in a journal article
entitled "Electrical disturbances apparently of extraterrestrial origin"
in the Proceedings of the Institute of Radio Engineers.
Jansky concluded that since the Sun (and therefore other stars) were
not large emitters of radio noise, the strange radio interference may be
generated by interstellar gas and dust in the galaxy, in particular, by
"thermal agitation of charged particles." (Jansky's peak radio source, one of the brightest in the sky, was designated Sagittarius A in the 1950s and was later hypothesized to be emitted by electrons in a strong magnetic field. Current thinking is that these are ions in orbit around a massive Black hole
at the center of the galaxy at a point now designated as Sagittarius
A*. The asterisk indicates that the particles at Sagittarius A are
ionized.)
After 1935, Jansky wanted to investigate the radio waves from the
Milky Way in further detail, but Bell Labs reassigned him to another
project, so he did no further work in the field of astronomy. His
pioneering efforts in the field of radio astronomy have been recognized
by the naming of the fundamental unit of flux density, the jansky (Jy), after him.
Grote Reber
was inspired by Jansky's work, and built a parabolic radio telescope 9m
in diameter in his backyard in 1937. He began by repeating Jansky's
observations, and then conducted the first sky survey in the radio
frequencies. On February 27, 1942, James Stanley Hey, a British Army research officer, made the first detection of radio waves emitted by the Sun. Later that year George Clark Southworth, at Bell Labs
like Jansky, also detected radiowaves from the Sun. Both researchers
were bound by wartime security surrounding radar, so Reber, who was not,
published his 1944 findings first. Several other people independently discovered solar radio waves, including E. Schott in Denmark and Elizabeth Alexander working on Norfolk Island.
At Cambridge University, where ionospheric research had taken place during World War II, J. A. Ratcliffe along with other members of the Telecommunications Research Establishment that had carried out wartime research into radar,
created a radiophysics group at the university where radio wave
emissions from the Sun were observed and studied.
This early research soon branched out into the observation of other
celestial radio sources and interferometry techniques were pioneered to
isolate the angular source of the detected emissions. Martin Ryle and Antony Hewish at the Cavendish Astrophysics Group developed the technique of Earth-rotation aperture synthesis. The radio astronomy group in Cambridge went on to found the Mullard Radio Astronomy Observatory near Cambridge in the 1950s. During the late 1960s and early 1970s, as computers (such as the Titan) became capable of handling the computationally intensive Fourier transform
inversions required, they used aperture synthesis to create a
'One-Mile' and later a '5 km' effective aperture using the One-Mile and
Ryle telescopes, respectively. They used the Cambridge Interferometer to map the radio sky, producing the Second (2C) and Third (3C) Cambridge Catalogues of Radio Sources.
Techniques
Radio astronomers use different techniques to observe objects in the
radio spectrum. Instruments may simply be pointed at an energetic radio
source to analyze its emission. To "image" a region of the sky in more
detail, multiple overlapping scans can be recorded and pieced together
in a mosaic image. The type of instrument used depends on the strength of the signal and the amount of detail needed.
Observations from the Earth's
surface are limited to wavelengths that can pass through the
atmosphere. At low frequencies or long wavelengths, transmission is
limited by the ionosphere, which reflects waves with frequencies less than its characteristic plasma frequency. Watervapor
interferes with radio astronomy at higher frequencies, which has led to
building radio observatories that conduct observations at millimeter
wavelengths at very high and dry sites, in order to minimize the water
vapor content in the line of sight. Finally, transmitting devices on
Earth may cause radio-frequency interference. Because of this, many radio observatories are built at remote places.
Radio telescopes may need to be extremely large in order to receive signals with low signal-to-noise ratio. Also since angular resolution is a function of the diameter of the "objective" in proportion to the wavelength of the electromagnetic radiation being observed, radio telescopes have to be much larger in comparison to their optical
counterparts. For example, a 1-meter diameter optical telescope is two
million times bigger than the wavelength of light observed giving it a
resolution of roughly 0.3 arc seconds,
whereas a radio telescope "dish" many times that size may, depending on
the wavelength observed, only be able to resolve an object the size of
the full moon (30 minutes of arc).
The difficulty in achieving high resolutions with single radio telescopes led to radio interferometry, developed by British radio astronomer Martin Ryle and Australian engineer, radiophysicist, and radio astronomer Joseph Lade Pawsey and Ruby Payne-Scott in 1946. The first use of a radio interferometer for an astronomical observation was carried out by Payne-Scott, Pawsey and Lindsay McCready on 26 January 1946 using a single converted radar antenna (broadside array) at 200 MHz near Sydney, Australia.
This group used the principle of a sea-cliff interferometer in which
the antenna (formerly a World War II radar) observed the Sun at sunrise
with interference arising from the direct radiation from the Sun and the
reflected radiation from the sea. With this baseline of almost 200
meters, the authors determined that the solar radiation during the burst
phase was much smaller than the solar disk and arose from a region
associated with a large sunspot group. The Australia group laid out the principles of aperture synthesis in a ground-breaking paper published in 1947. The use of a sea-cliff interferometer
had been demonstrated by numerous groups in Australia, Iran and the UK
during World War II, who had observed interference fringes (the direct
radar return radiation and the reflected signal from the sea) from
incoming aircraft.
The Cambridge group of Ryle and Vonberg observed the Sun at
175 MHz for the first time in mid July 1946 with a Michelson
interferometer consisting of two radio antennas with spacings of some
tens of meters up to 240 meters. They showed that the radio radiation
was smaller than 10 arc minutes
in size and also detected circular polarization in the Type I bursts.
Two other groups had also detected circular polarization at about the
same time (David Martyn in Australia and Edward Appleton with James Stanley Hey in the UK).
Modern radio interferometers consist of widely separated radio telescopes observing the same object that are connected together using coaxial cable, waveguide, optical fiber, or other type of transmission line. This not only increases the total signal collected, it can also be used in a process called aperture synthesis to vastly increase resolution. This technique works by superposing ("interfering") the signal waves from the different telescopes on the principle that waves that coincide with the same phase
will add to each other while two waves that have opposite phases will
cancel each other out. This creates a combined telescope that is the
size of the antennas furthest apart in the array. In order to produce a
high quality image, a large number of different separations between
different telescopes are required (the projected separation between any
two telescopes as seen from the radio source is called a "baseline") –
as many different baselines as possible are required in order to get a
good quality image. For example, the Very Large Array has 27 telescopes giving 351 independent baselines at once.
Beginning in the 1970s, improvements in the stability of radio
telescope receivers permitted telescopes from all over the world (and
even in Earth orbit) to be combined to perform very-long-baseline interferometry.
Instead of physically connecting the antennas, data received at each
antenna is paired with timing information, usually from a local atomic clock,
and then stored for later analysis on magnetic tape or hard disk. At
that later time, the data is correlated with data from other antennas
similarly recorded, to produce the resulting image. Using this method it
is possible to synthesise an antenna that is effectively the size of
the Earth. The large distances between the telescopes enable very high
angular resolutions to be achieved, much greater in fact than in any
other field of astronomy. At the highest frequencies, synthesised beams
less than 1 milliarcsecond are possible.
The pre-eminent VLBI arrays operating today are the Very Long Baseline Array (with telescopes located across North America) and the European VLBI Network
(telescopes in Europe, China, South Africa and Puerto Rico). Each array
usually operates separately, but occasional projects are observed
together producing increased sensitivity. This is referred to as Global
VLBI. There are also a VLBI networks, operating in Australia and New
Zealand called the LBA (Long Baseline Array), and arrays in Japan, China and South Korea which observe together to form the East-Asian VLBI Network (EAVN).
Since its inception, recording data onto hard media was the only
way to bring the data recorded at each telescope together for later
correlation. However, the availability today of worldwide,
high-bandwidth networks makes it possible to do VLBI in real time. This
technique (referred to as e-VLBI) was originally pioneered in Japan, and
more recently adopted in Australia and in Europe by the EVN (European
VLBI Network) who perform an increasing number of scientific e-VLBI
projects per year.
Radio astronomy has led to substantial increases in astronomical
knowledge, particularly with the discovery of several classes of new
objects, including pulsars, quasars and radio galaxies.
This is because radio astronomy allows us to see things that are not
detectable in optical astronomy. Such objects represent some of the
most extreme and energetic physical processes in the universe.
The cosmic microwave background radiation
was also first detected using radio telescopes. However, radio
telescopes have also been used to investigate objects much closer to
home, including observations of the Sun and solar activity, and radar mapping of the planets.
The allocation of radio frequencies is provided according to Article 5 of the ITU Radio Regulations (edition 2012).
In order to improve harmonisation in spectrum utilisation, the
majority of service-allocations stipulated in this document were
incorporated in national Tables of Frequency Allocations and
Utilisations which is with-in the responsibility of the appropriate
national administration. The allocation might be primary, secondary,
exclusive, and shared.
primary allocation: is indicated by writing in capital letters (see example below)
secondary allocation: is indicated by small letters
exclusive or shared utilization: is within the responsibility of administrations
In line to the appropriate ITU Region the frequency bands are allocated (primary or secondary) to the radio astronomy service as follows.