jebii said:
Forgive me if this is a dumb question; from what I've been reading an electron can exist simultaneously in two places. Is this definite?
Why can/can't it exist in more forms?
I suspect that a "yes" or "no" answer to your question might be somewhat misleading, as your question, while natural, may be somewhat messy.
The traditional mantra of standard quantum mechanics (QM) is that QM can say nothing about electron's position between measurements, and this mantra is relatively consistent. Therefore, according to this mantra, we can only say something about electron's position (or "existence" in some "place", in the wording of your question) at the time of measurement. However, strictly speaking, we can never say that an electron was at time t0 at point x0, as no position measurement can be infinitely precise due to the uncertainty principle: infinitely precise position measurement at a certain moment in time would require infinite energy. Moreover, as Landau and Peierls noted, due to special relativity, position measurement with accuracy better than the Compton wavelength makes little sense, as the energy required for such precise measurement can be sufficient for pair production, so you cannot know anymore if you have measured the position of the initial electron or the position of an electron of a pair created in the course of measurement. Therefore, if we stick to the mantra, we can never say even that an electron can exist (be observed) in one particular place, let alone two:-)
So let us try to go somewhat beyond the mantra. According to quantum electrodynamics (QED), we never observe a "naked" electron, but only a "physical" electron, i.e. the naked electron surrounded by photons and pairs. One of the features of the physical electron is its Coulomb field, which has infinite effective radius. However, as I said, the mantra is relatively consistent: we can detect the electron by its Coulomb field at a large distance, but the photon detected in such measurement will have large wavelength, so the position uncertainty will be high.
In this context, the recent experiments by Couder e.a. may be interesting (
https://hekla.ipgp.fr/IMG/pdf/Couder-Fort_PRL_2006.pdf , they were discussed in several threads here). They observed trajectories of silicone oil droplets on the surface of silicone oil (for some reason, it is called "silicon oil" in the article, but I am not sure this is correct). Those trajectories provided surprisingly good emulation of the two-slit experiment in QM. This experiment can be described in terms of classical mechanics, and what happens is the droplet creates a wave on the surface of liquid and then interacts with its own wave, creating the interference pattern. While you can apply the mantra of QM to the droplets in Couder's experiment as well, and it will provide a relatively consistent picture, this would not look very good:-)