gib65 Posted May 28, 2005 Posted May 28, 2005 Imagine that you had one photon traveling alone in space. Because of the particle-wave duality of photons (and pretty much every type of particle), this photon would not only travel as a particle, but as a wave too. There are 2 ways that I can imagine this, and I'd like to know which one seems more accurate. 1) As a wave, the photon propagates from a central point of emmission in all directions, and as a particle, it exists at a point somewhere on the crest of the propagating wave. It doesn't have an exact position being in a state of superposition, and only has a probable position. 2) As a particle and as a wave, it is at a precise position in space and traveling with a precise velocity and momentum. As a wave, it does not propagate, but travels in a specific direction, much like a wave traveling down a river. Which one of these sounds more accurate?
bascule Posted May 28, 2005 Posted May 28, 2005 I think it's easiest to think of them as strings vibrating in a Calabi-Yau space and thus exhibiting both particle-like and wave-like behavior simultaneously, but maybe that's just me
5614 Posted May 28, 2005 Posted May 28, 2005 The way I "see" it is that you have particles (photons) travelling in a wave shape, like dolphins go forward, but also up and down in water... so photons go forward and also up and down... it is this forward and up/down action that would make it seem a wave shape. To be technically correct EMR (electromagnetic radiation) is neither a wave or a particle, it depends on it interacts. Some experiments show EMR to act like particles, other experiments show EMR acting like a wave, wave-particle duality means that the thing it is describing has charachteristics of both waves and particles it isn't actually both together as we visualise it, more it is a 'thing' having charachteristics of both.
gib65 Posted May 29, 2005 Author Posted May 29, 2005 The way I "see" it is that you have particles (photons) travelling in a wave shape, like dolphins go forward, but also up and down in water... so photons go forward and also up and down... it is this forward and up/down action that would make it seem a wave shape. That seems to describe the second scenario I mentioned.
Rebel.esd Posted June 3, 2005 Posted June 3, 2005 I'm inclined not to describe photons as moving, but rather that the point where they're most likely to be found "moves" throughout spacetime. Is there anything wrong with that understanding?
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