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You mean in its annihilation?You won't see a photon anywhere, except in its release of 'energy' dying, as I understands it. But as we also seem to assume that waves can 'reflect' elastically, changing 'momentum' (direction) but not 'kinetic energy'?It most definitely should be a duality.
I don't agree there Simplified, you can deduce a path, but not 'know' it. It's enough comparing it to a balls path to see the difference there. And all deducing involves statistical approaches, as far as I know. You can only measure a photon once, in its annihilation. That you can define them as being 'identical' of property and then assume that by measuring a large amount coming from a same source, at different positions, do not give you a photons path, as various 'slit experiment' also can show you, depending on interpretation.
yes, if you are talking about a 'photon', not a electron.
Quantum states are often defined in terms of quantized values: physical quantities such as energy, momentum, position, angular momentum, and so on that take on only discrete values. You can't generalize to all particles about what values get quantized, but for each type of particle and situation there are rules. Photons are, by definition, the smallest quanta of energy you can get from an electromagnetic field of a given frequency. If I shine a green laser at you, the green photons that make it up are the tiniest possible piece of energy you can pick out of that beam. Because they are defined as energy quanta, they do not have a simple description in terms of how they spread out over space, so you can't properly draw a photon wave traveling through space.
No. Photons don't follow classical paths through space.
Quote from: JP on 19/12/2011 15:02:57No. Photons don't follow classical paths through space.Then I don't understand why shadows of objects can be predicted?