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Xris wrote:Men once expected the gods to come down to earth and realise all our dreams but we forgot the golden rule. Heaven is for dreamers and gods. Earth is for humans and reality. We foolishly believe we are becoming godlike and can imagine ruling both heaven and earth. It is time for another reality check, when we can not explain the simplest of observations without turning ourselves in to gods or inventing millions of alternative existences. Flying too near the sun is dangerous.Does that mean you favour the "Many Worlds" interpretation of quantum mechanics?
Teh wrote: (Nested quote removed.)No. I am against the concept of particles in explaining this experiment. In fact I am like Mach, against the concept of particles in explaining what we can not observe directly. Metaphysics is an exercise that should be left to philosophers to ponder, not direct the path of science. The acceptance of this one simple experiment has enormous consequences for theoretical science. We appear incapable of even looking for an alternative to the seemingly dual nature of particles. Photons or electrons are concepts that change their characteristics to fit the desires of the theory. Even when they defy logic they are still referred to as particles. This experiment should be telling us we are wrong not that we are altering reality by simply looking, nor should it indicate the unbelievable idea that reality constantly alters to accommodate the dual nature of the quantum universe.
Does that mean you favour the "Many Worlds" interpretation of quantum mechanics?
Xris wrote: No. I am against the concept of particles in explaining this experiment. In fact I am like Mach, against the concept of particles in explaining what we can not observe directly. Metaphysics is an exercise that should be left to philosophers to ponder, not direct the path of science. The acceptance of this one simple experiment has enormous consequences for theoretical science. We appear incapable of even looking for an alternative to the seemingly dual nature of particles. Photons or electrons are concepts that change their characteristics to fit the desires of the theory. Even when they defy logic they are still referred to as particles. This experiment should be telling us we are wrong not that we are altering reality by simply looking, nor should it indicate the unbelievable idea that reality constantly alters to accommodate the dual nature of the quantum universe.So, how do you explain Brownian motion?
Xris wrote:No. I am against the concept of particles in explaining this experiment. In fact I am like Mach, against the concept of particles in explaining what we can not observe directly. Metaphysics is an exercise that should be left to philosophers to ponder, not direct the path of science. The acceptance of this one simple experiment has enormous consequences for theoretical science. We appear incapable of even looking for an alternative to the seemingly dual nature of particles. Photons or electrons are concepts that change their characteristics to fit the desires of the theory. Even when they defy logic they are still referred to as particles. This experiment should be telling us we are wrong not that we are altering reality by simply looking, nor should it indicate the unbelievable idea that reality constantly alters to accommodate the dual nature of the quantum universe.This is perhaps the most cogent and intelligent thing I have ever seen you post. I am quite impressed.
Teh wrote: (Nested quote removed.)Ignorance does not indicate a particle. We must ask, do you believe in pure energy? The point where energy expresses itself as a particle is the question. Sand is particle that we can observe and understand. Complex molecules or simple energetic particles are all just terms we use to explain what we can not observe directly. If we start believing in the concept of particles like sand we loose the plot completely. Energy of the universe and all the mass it creates is electromagnetic. If we understand that and keep it as a constant reminder of what we are trying to understand it might stop this constant misunderstanding of the quantum universe.Electrons with spin, frequency and an ability to communicate instantaneously can not be what we imagine, a very small grain of sand. Well it can if you believe the quantum universe has no reliable laws we can refer to. If it is so Alice in wonderland why not put a foolish imp there or a arogant god? Just look back at that naive link that is used to inform the uninitiated about the double slit screen experiment. Electrons fired like bullets one at a time. Electrons as individual particles are accepted even before we try to explain the duality of the experiment.
So, how do you explain Brownian motion?
Xris wrote: (Nested quote removed.)I agree, ignorance does not indicate a particle, but Brownian motion and the photoelectric effect do. Also electrons are particles and it is quite clear that light is quantised. If we except there are quanta, then isn't that synonymous with "particle".
Ignorance does not indicate a particle. We must ask, do you believe in pure energy? The point where energy expresses itself as a particle is the question. Sand is particle that we can observe and understand. Complex molecules or simple energetic particles are all just terms we use to explain what we can not observe directly. If we start believing in the concept of particles like sand we loose the plot completely. Energy of the universe and all the mass it creates is electromagnetic. If we understand that and keep it as a constant reminder of what we are trying to understand it might stop this constant misunderstanding of the quantum universe.Electrons with spin, frequency and an ability to communicate instantaneously can not be what we imagine, a very small grain of sand. Well it can if you believe the quantum universe has no reliable laws we can refer to. If it is so Alice in wonderland why not put a foolish imp there or a arogant god? Just look back at that naive link that is used to inform the uninitiated about the double slit screen experiment. Electrons fired like bullets one at a time. Electrons as individual particles are accepted even before we try to explain the duality of the experiment.
Teh wrote: (Nested quote removed.)Brownian motion indicates particles but not electrons nor photons. As I have said, at some point energy does become mass. I am not saying the point of mass requires an observable image.
I agree, ignorance does not indicate a particle, but Brownian motion and the photoelectric effect do. Also electrons are particles and it is quite clear that light is quantised. If we except there are quanta, then isn't that synonymous with "particle".
Some people believe the "quantum universe" i.e. reality is subject to deterministic and comprehensible laws. Nothing, by the way, can communicate instantaneously. That idea is completely unphysical and wrong.
The electron decided to act differently as though is was aware it was being watched ... what does an observer have to do with any of this? The observer collapsed the wave function simply by observingI think this is a needlessly confusing and misleading way to present these ideas to a non-specialist audience. It introduces the technical term "wave function" with no explanation and says nothing about what it means by "collapsing the wave function."
Steve3007 wrote: The point is that observing the electron has an effect on it because observation is an action. In the normal visual sense of the word, it is an action that involves bouncing light off something. And it is no mystery that bouncing things off of other things affects them!However, in Brian Greene's Fabric of the Cosmos, we read
The explanation of uncertainty as arising through the unavoidable disturbance caused by the measurement process has provided physicists with a useful intuitive guide as well as a powerful explanatory framework in certain specific situations. However, it can also be misleading. It may give the impression that uncertainty arises only when we lumbering experimenters meddle with things. This is not true. Uncertainty is built into the wave structure of quantum mechanics and exists whether or not we carry out some clumsy measurement.(p98.)
Logicus wrote: The wave in "wave function" is a probability wave, not a physical wave.Right. Where he says 'the electron interferes with itself', it is because if you fire them one at a time, the result you get is exactly the same as if they were all fired simultaneously. So the individual 'particles' are tracing the path outlined by 'the wave', even though there is only one of them in motion at any given time during the period. The 'superposition' notion is that, prior to being measured, the 'particle' is not actually in any location. So before you measure it, you can say that it really exists. That is the essence of the 'consciousness causes collapse' issue, which is probably the biggest philosophical challenge posed by physics.
Logicus wrote:To make it more confusing: The wave in "wave function" is a probability wave, not a physical wave. It is an indeterminate location of the particle until something external to it "collapses" the wave by, in some way, determining where the particle has to be. This is the explanation for why it changes by observing it: observation collapses the probability wave. All that says, though, is that when you "see" the particle, that's where it is. The mystery is why that changes the outcome. They are essentially saying that defining the location alters the path of the particle which then alters the outcome of the experiment. I don't know if you noticed, but the cartoon was also stating that the indvidual particles go through both slits at the same time and interfere with themselves "in some way". That sounds more wave-like. In fact, I would say they are trying to express the behavior of the particles using an analog to the behavior of waves.Logicus. I realised the first time I read of this experiment, something must be wrong with our preconceptions. We must have missed something from the very start of our reasoning. What an experiment though. We have to admire the mind that conceived of such a worrying and magnificent quandary. There is nothing wrong with the experiment and nothing wrong with stating what we believe. What i find wrong is the constant juggling to certify what was seen as a proof of the concept of particles.
Is this a real problem, or a problem of how we are able to express it with language? The results would seem to indicate it is real. What does it mean? This has been an unresolved problem for decades.
It turns out that as soon as you increase the wavelength to a size such that it is sufficiently docile not to disturb the electron too much, it becomes too long to tell which slit it went through. And that is the start of the interesting part.In my view, the route in, for an unfamiliar audience, is the mechanism for the uncertainty in this particular case - the electron being disturbed by the light that is used to observe it. The general principle of the uncertainty, including the relatively extremely abstract mathematical concept of a "wave funtion", comes in later chapters and is, ideally, built on lots and lots of prior experience. When I was studying this at University it was the culmination of at least two years of mathematical foundations (on top of high school), including, for one thing, learning vector calculus and then how to re-frame the subject of classical Newtonian mechanics into a thing called Hamiltonian and Lagrangian mechanics, as preparation for the mathematical "shape" of the Schrodinger wave equation.
Steve3007 wrote:As I said, the part at the end of my post is where the interesting stuff is just beginning. And that interesting stuff starts with the curious fact that nature appears to be conspiring to stop us from simulataneously measuring the position and the momentum of the electron through the mechanism of the light that illuminates it:As I understand the experimental setup when this experiment was originally carried out, the component used to "observe" the electron passing through one of the slits was not optical in nature. It was some sort of device to detect the motion of a particle through the slit, but it did not use light waves to do it.
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