Recent content by sasan
-
S
Graduate Difference between probability waves & electromagnetic waves?
But even reality is not real and relative more than it is relevant.- sasan
- Post #22
- Forum: Electromagnetism
-
S
Graduate Difference between probability waves & electromagnetic waves?
Dear People, This is the bottom line: Electromagnetic (Maxwell) waves have NOTHING to do with wave function. The only thing they have in common is the word "wave". I hope we are all in agreement with this. Are we?- sasan
- Post #20
- Forum: Electromagnetism
-
S
Graduate Difference between probability waves & electromagnetic waves?
Thank you all for replying. The reason I asked this question: There is HUGE confusion among people including scientists as to what is particle-wave duality? The duality is that light behaves like a wave (refraction and detraction, for example) and sometimes like a particle (the...- sasan
- Post #12
- Forum: Electromagnetism
-
S
Graduate Difference between probability waves & electromagnetic waves?
If you are right, then Sean Carroll must be wrong in this video at Fermi Labs: please see 29:50 A minute later he says a camera can also collapse the wave function. And this is also wrong.- sasan
- Post #3
- Forum: Electromagnetism
-
S
Undergrad Can the presence of a field be detected w/o any charge?
Wow, this was my first post and I did get my question answered. I am so thankful. I truly am deeply thankful.- sasan
- Post #8
- Forum: Electromagnetism
-
S
Undergrad Can the presence of a field be detected w/o any charge?
Is there anyway to detect the Earth's magnetic field without a compass? or putting it differently, Is there anyway to detect an electric field without bringing a charged particle in proximity of the field?- sasan
- Thread
- Charge Field
- Replies: 12
- Forum: Electromagnetism
-
S
Graduate Difference between probability waves & electromagnetic waves?
What I know: A ripple/wave in a field gives rise to a particle. For example, a ripple in electric field creates a photon. Question: Is this the same principle as probability wave which when observed reveals a particle?- sasan
- Thread
- Difference Electromagnetic Electromagnetic waves Probability Quantum mechanics Waves
- Replies: 22
- Forum: Electromagnetism