Ostronomos
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Do share your thoughts on this statement.
Ostronomos said:Do share your thoughts on this statement.
ZapperZ said:Please start by reading the FAQ subforums in the general physics forum.
Zz.
Ostronomos said:Can you possibly point me to the FAQ? I can't seem to find it.
Mark M said:
bhobba said:The wave particle duality is a crock. It is neither particle or wave - sometimes it is LIKE a classical particle in that it can have a definite position and sometimes LIKE a wave in that the theoretical solutions in certain physical situations such as being in an eigenstate of momentum is wave like - but in reality it is neither.
Thanks
Bill
Ostronomos said:So if light is neither a wave or a particle then what could it be? The simplest answer is usually the most correct one so what could it be if it's neither as you say?
So there is no duality – at least not within quantum mechanics. We still use the “duality” description of light when we try to describe light to laymen because wave and particle are behavior most people are familiar with. However, it doesn’t mean that in physics, or in the working of physicists, such a duality has any significance.
Ostronomos said:So if light is neither a wave or a particle then what could it be?
Ostronomos said:So if light is neither a wave or a particle then what could it be? The simplest answer is usually the most correct one so what could it be if it's neither as you say?
How is saying it is 'sometimes like a classical paricle and sometimes like a wave" NOT "wave-particle" duality. "Wave particle duality" does NOT say electrons and other thing sometimes are waves and then magically change into particles. It says that at the particle scale there is no such thing as particles or waves but objects that have properties of both.bhobba said:The wave particle duality is a crock. It is neither particle or wave - sometimes it is LIKE a classical particle in that it can have a definite position and sometimes LIKE a wave in that the theoretical solutions in certain physical situations such as being in an eigenstate of momentum is wave like - but in reality it is neither.
Thanks
Bill
HallsofIvy said:How is saying it is 'sometimes like a classical paricle and sometimes like a wave" NOT "wave-particle" duality. "Wave particle duality" does NOT say electrons and other thing sometimes are waves and then magically change into particles.