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by breadAndWater
2894 days ago
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None of the things you've mentioned are anything close to what I'm bringing up. The point I'm making is that popular discussion of quantum effects are so wildly off-base, and have muddied the waters of even trying to understand what happens between photons and electrons, by casually reading about it. But you see something like this emerge, and it's really obvious that solutions to these problems were on the right track even as far back as the early 1900's, only to be derailed by academics emerging in the 1940's. Principles such as: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Huygens%E2%80%93Fresnel_princi... had it right very early. So, was there an ulterior motive to all the complex obfuscation of math, and inaccurate scientific reporting throughout the later 20th century? Or has it all been one big, innocent misunderstanding, among aloof egg heads distracted by their gigantic precious particle colliders? One wonders. |
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The double-slit experiment, entanglement etc. are all concerned with what happens with individual particles to produce those statistics, and what that means.
For example, it's not remotely surprising defracted light can reconstruct an image of an object (this idea has been around for a while - i.e. evanescent wave fluoresence, or the quest for a negative refractive index material which would be beat out diffraction limits handling). But that's not why it's not surprising - it's not surprising because you can also detect the existence of solid objects without actually touching them with so much as a photon purely by letting the probability field of one potentially extend through them, and then observing whether you see diffraction patterns along the path where photons do travel (basically a highly biased double-slit experiment reveals whether it would've interfered well before a particle is ever likely to have hit the object obstructing one of the beam paths).