ripped wrote:
"A photon is neither a particle or a wave, but something that exhibits the properties of both."
What I cant find the answer to, is after a photon has been collapsed into its particle state, can it then be un-collapsed back into its wave state?
It seems like you are not really reading the posts...
First off... I understand the dual slit experiment and it's ramification... but you missed the point... a SINGLE electron can interfere with ITSELF, going through BOTH slits at the same time...
Secondly... A photon does not change forms... it simply behaves AS both based on the experiment being performed... But it is NOT a wave, OR a particle...
as my previous post stated "The answer is that light is a quantum mechanical object that isn't a wave or particle - i.e. something much more mathematically complicated that has some wave-like and some particle-like properties.
In spite of the description of photons "striking" or hitting other objects, photons don't have quantum mechanical wave-functions... oddly enough, they don't even have positions... even in that hazy cloud that quantum mechanics considers positions (RE: protons, neutrons and electrons)...
Feynman and his colleagues developed the quantum electrodynamic description (QED) of light that describes its nature and behavior in much more detail, BUT that is just for now. Some new observation may change this in the future. For now, however, QED remains the most accurately tested theory in physics with no observational disagreements to date.
Light as a wave pretty much explains all of the macro properties of light. Light as a particle pretty much explains all the micro properties of light. Keep in mind, when ever anyone speaks about light as a wave or particle... nature is much more subtle."
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Yeah. I'm done. Don't bother messaging and expecting a response - i've left WP permanently.