ribod
- 14
- 0
hi!
Every time i stumble upon quantum physics I get to the same example, where the subatomic particles (photons i suppose) behave like particles in a particle experiment, and waves in a wave experiment. Then the conclusion is that the particle becomes what the observer measures.
I'm just thinking the particle could be something else than a wave or particle? and these experiments just show that the particles can behave like both a wave and particle... the question that remains now is the missing information that explains why the observer matters.
The information normally supplied follows the logics like: does an orange have weight or colour? So first we measure if it falls to the ground when we release it... ok it does, so in this example, because we observe it falling down, it behaves like it has gravity...then next experiment, we observe the light, and conclude it has colour, because we were observing the colour... Obviously the orange has gravity and colour all the time, but we were just overlooking it in the experiments.
Please explain this
Every time i stumble upon quantum physics I get to the same example, where the subatomic particles (photons i suppose) behave like particles in a particle experiment, and waves in a wave experiment. Then the conclusion is that the particle becomes what the observer measures.
I'm just thinking the particle could be something else than a wave or particle? and these experiments just show that the particles can behave like both a wave and particle... the question that remains now is the missing information that explains why the observer matters.
The information normally supplied follows the logics like: does an orange have weight or colour? So first we measure if it falls to the ground when we release it... ok it does, so in this example, because we observe it falling down, it behaves like it has gravity...then next experiment, we observe the light, and conclude it has colour, because we were observing the colour... Obviously the orange has gravity and colour all the time, but we were just overlooking it in the experiments.
Please explain this