Neo_Anderson said:
Now I'm kind of understanding what you're saying here.
The usual QM answer to the classical question, "What happens when we fire the single photon thru the two slits? Huh? The next photon will seem to interfere with it. How? It was fired thru seconds later!"
The QM answer is this: "Well, the single photon created a double of itself (superposed) and interfered with itself at the slit. That's why we see the diffraction fringes. There was true, almost classical interference at the slits, since we did have two [albeit superposed] photons there."
Now this is my extent of current thought (don't blame me; blame popular media since that's where I derived my info).
Your suggestion is interesting, snce you invoke the HUP into the matter; something I haven't read about. So is it a matter of looking at momentum of photon v. position of photon statistically? And if this is so, and since we know the HUP to be something of a fundamental 'property' (sorry), then how to truly account for the diffraction fringes? Is there a set of equations (non-rigorous, of course), that you can direct my attention span?
The difficulty, as I see it, is that we refuse to accept the quantum observations as the final say in the matter. We want to know “how the experiment works”. We keep demanding a classical description for a quantum event - and there isn’t any!
In the mechanical universe of classical physics every event has a cause that is known to us. If something happens we can explain “why it happened.”
Not so in the quantum domain! Quantum mechanics does not describe processes or the behavior of particles moving through space-time. It only tells us the possible results of a measurement and the statistical distribution of those results. Unfortunately, most of us refuse to accept such meager scraps of information.
Quantum events have no classical explanation. That is why we invented quantum mechanics. But we still cling to classical concepts. For example, we still believe the classical maxim, “Waves exhibit interference, particles do not.” So, if particles exhibit interference, as they do in some quantum events, then they must be acting like waves. Then the weirdness begins, as you have noticed.
You want to know how quantum interference happens when particles pass through two slits one at a time. We know there is no classical explanation and quantum mechanics doesn’t tell us either. So, there is no way to answer your question! The truth is, we have no idea “what is really happening” when “a massive chunk of carbon passes through the slits”!
There is a quantum explanation however. At the slits, we know the particle’s position, which introduces an uncertainty in its momentum. Repeating the experiment, subsequent particles can then be scattered at different angles, i.e. with different momenta. Repeating the experiment many times we get a probability distribution of scattered particles that has maxima and minima reminiscent of constructive and destructive interference in wave optics.
Further, no one has ever observed that, “--------the single photon created a double of itself (superposed) and interfered with itself at the slit.” Your understanding of the superposition state is erroneous. In the double slit experiment we have a superposition of position eigenvectors, not a superposition of particles.
There is a good discussion in arxiv.org/pdf/quant-ph/0703126. before the calculations begin.
Best wishes.