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a gravitational field acts as a point source outside the mass causing the field
But ,just batting along in a straight line, it seems reasonable that they should be in the same place.
That's,surely, what duality is about. If it behaves, in our experiment, as if it is a particle then it is a particle. You surely don't want it to 'wiggle' just because it can also behave as a wave. The probability field could / would be more or less uniform with no 'constraining' fields.btw, is the wave transverse or longitudinal?
we all know about photons; I was talking of De Broglie waves.
But in any case, where is this photon wiggling? Is it wiggling all over the Universe?
Quotea gravitational field acts as a point source outside the mass causing the fieldOnly at infinity. The gravitational potential for a dumbell shape, for instance is not spherical. If you happen to be on the Moon, you are attracted to the Moon, not to the centre of mass of Earth and Moon. The total system doesn't behave like a point if you are within / near it.
f you are standing on the moon, and therefore have the same velocity as the moon, you need to be attracted to the common center of mass of the Earth-Moon system to follow the same path as the Moon in that system, do you not?
You have to avoid falling into common conceptual traps.