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There are different approaches Simplified. Some do want to see it as one path, but that isn't how the experiments I know of describe it. But all agree in that the source (laser) and the sink (detector) are connected, and they also, like Feynman's interference or otherwise, leave only one path existing as the defined outcome. And it's those 'final' paths that then defines the shadow you cast.
Quote from: yor_on on 19/12/2011 15:56:35There are different approaches Simplified. Some do want to see it as one path, but that isn't how the experiments I know of describe it. But all agree in that the source (laser) and the sink (detector) are connected, and they also, like Feynman's interference or otherwise, leave only one path existing as the defined outcome. And it's those 'final' paths that then defines the shadow you cast.Then your astronomers can predict an eclipse only after this event.
Quote from: simplified on 19/12/2011 16:54:10Quote from: yor_on on 19/12/2011 15:56:35There are different approaches Simplified. Some do want to see it as one path, but that isn't how the experiments I know of describe it. But all agree in that the source (laser) and the sink (detector) are connected, and they also, like Feynman's interference or otherwise, leave only one path existing as the defined outcome. And it's those 'final' paths that then defines the shadow you cast.Then your astronomers can predict an eclipse only after this event. Simplified, there is no problem with making predictions if intensity by averaging over enormous numbers of photons. If the sun released only one photon, they couldn't predict the eclipse.
Simplifiedi. we can and do predict eclipses (you cannot find fault with our ability to do that)ii. using the sun as a source for a single photon is a bonkers idea (you are the person raising the idea that we must be able to reduce the sun to a singular source - it isn't, and we don't try to make it so)
I thought Yor_on and JP were serious.
Time doesn't actually stand still for a photon according to our theories.
Quote from: JPTime doesn't actually stand still for a photon according to our theories.Could we have some more information about these theories, please.
QuoteI thought Yor_on and JP were serious.You lost me there, Simplified, just when I thought I'd kept a handle on the thread.
I suggest you reread what we were describing, simplified. You keep thinking of photons as "little bullets," which they aren't.
The simple question is too complex(difficult) for the backward science.
If photons travel at the speed of light, a clock in a photon shall be stand-still. If it is stand-still photon shall not change or undistructable. How this could be explained?