Then why the experiment in first place, if the theory already provided the solution?
Well I've read the phenomenon still occurs with atoms, molecules and even buckyballs! So there should be a way to measure the particle's gravitational effect without plank-scale technology... still years way...
Ok, but maybe it collapsed more and more with each strike? With all photons and electrons in such narrow volume of the early universe there should have been a lot of collisions, and the wave feature shouldn't be perceptible nowadays. I can only think the original wave initially had a very large...
Hello again. In a double slit experiment with electrons, suppose that we have the instrumentation to measure how space-time is curved by these particles. Would it be possible to obtain the electron's position and momentum by measuring the change in the direction of photons that move nearby but...
Hi. From what I've read about the "observer effect" in the two slit experiment, the electron's wave function collapses due to photons altering its momentum. Now, in the beginning of the universe photons couldn't escape the original Big Bang fog until it cleared out, so these should have...