Jilang
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Except... It might change the momentum?
The discussion revolves around the nature of electrons in quantum mechanics, specifically whether all electrons are fundamentally identical or if variations could exist. Participants explore implications of quantum field theory, the concept of indistinguishability, and the consequences for quantum mechanics and particle interactions.
Participants express a mix of agreement on the indistinguishability of electrons, while also raising questions and hypothetical scenarios that suggest uncertainty about the implications of this concept. The discussion remains unresolved regarding the nature of electrons and the meaning of their identity in various contexts.
Limitations include the dependence on definitions of indistinguishability and the unresolved nature of how to experimentally determine if two electrons are the same particle.
Jilang said:Except... It might change the momentum?
craigi said:Except it must be conserved.
Jilang said:Mmmm, doesn't the uncertainty in the momentum increase with time or am I getting that bit wrong?
doesn't the uncertainty in the momentum increase with time or am I getting that bit wrong?
This is a meaningless question for identical particles such as electrons.Jilang said:Do we know if the electron that is emitted is the same one that is detected?
atyy said:If they were not identical, this anti-symmetrization would not be required. This anti-symmetrization leads to things like the Pauli exclusion principle which has experimental consequences.
Now that's an open-ended question :)ddd123 said:What do you think are the most striking experimental consequences?