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First question, I assume everyone is pretty familiar with the Double Slit experiment that shows photons behaving as waves and or particles.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double-slit_experimentWell I was wondering if a Triple Slit (or more) experiment had ever been tried (or theorised about)? It's well know that detecting a photon passing through one of two paths will cause the probability waveform to collapse in a double slit experiment and show that photon behaving as a particle, but what would be the effect of monitoring one possible path in a triple slit experiment? Detecting the photon passing along the monitored path would obviously(?) result in it behaving as a particle, but not detecting it would result in it having an equal probability of passing along either of the other two paths to the detector screen, would you end up with an experiment that showed a photon behaving as both a particle and a wave all in one experiment, or would the detecting device in one of the three paths result in every photon showing particle properties?
It's well know that detecting a photon passing through one of two paths will cause the probability waveform to collapse in a double slit experiment and show that photon behaving as a particle