houserichichi said:
Just for my own clarification...localisation means the entire wave function of the particle is "at" the particle's position? If, however, this is not the case then the particle isn't really a point "particle" at all? Is this close to the idea?
I remember reading in a Feynman book a long time ago (I think it might have been "Surely You're Joking...") how his father once asked how a photon was emitted by an electron, that is, where did the photon come from? All he could answer with was "photon number must be conserved". This is where my thought of "resulting from the mathematics" came from as opposed to a physical interpretation.
There's so much I don't understand yet, but I'll catch up.
Kea should answer this since the word occurs in Kea's post. But wave functions are not localized in the sense of occurring at a point. They occur in a set of probabilities...the wave function for a p orbital describes a shape like twin dumbells sticking out on either side of the nucleus. Other orbitals are more complicated. The s orbital is simpler, just a sphere. The electron is not located anywhere exactly, just occurs as probabilities in the region of space occupied by the wave function. Altho the shape is where the electron is most likely to be found, there is a small but probable chance it could be found outside of the shape too. In theory, it could be almost anywhere. But mostly it is found inside the shape of the orbital cloud.
What I meant by point particle is that the mass and charge of the electron do not occupy a specific region of space such as might be described by a volume or radius. A proton or a neutron do have structure that can be defined, and in fact recent work suggests that the shape of the proton is actually eliptical or possibly toroidal. It has an actual size, with a radius and a surface area.
The electron, on the other hand, does not have a little localised chunk of matter at some place in the cloud at all. It is spread out over all the possible places where it can be found. It does have a certain wavelength and can be said to have an effect within a certain area, but the effect is not that of a solid object, but more like a swarm of virtual particles that appear and dissappear almost instantaneously throughout the wave. The presense of the charge and mass of the electron cause these virtual particles, and they occur close to a location or a point, but there is nothing measurable at the point itself.
As Kea said, it might be best to think of these point particles as units of spacetime structure. Spacetime is four dimensional and even the string theorists try not to think about what things look like in four dimensions. I happen to be an independent self supporting researcher, so I get to think about whatever I like. And I like to give myself serious cases of the spins by trying to visualise four dimensional objects.
Particles in quantum mechanics are described by certain characheristics called quantum numbers. One of these quantum numbers is spin. Another is mass, another is charge. In all particle interactions, the quantum numbers are conserved, that is, if you list all the numbers going into the reaction, and all the numbers coming out ot the reaction, they must total up the same. There may be a different number and kind of particles going in than there is coming out, but the quantum numbers, when totalled up, remain the same. I think that may be what you remember from Feynman.
I suggest you try reading Feynman's book QED, which is available in inexpensive versions from your local big box book store. It discusses all of this in much better form than I have used.
Be well,
and don't forget, while trying to catch up, that the path itself is the goal.
nc