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Quote from: Colin2B on 19/10/2020 09:18:47As you say, any classical theory which assumes, as many people do, that a polarising filter just filters has to give the wrong answer.Not much of a "theory" if it gives the wrong answer.I'm fairly sure that Maxwell's eqns (which are classical- neither QM, nor explicitly relativistic) will give the right answer.
As you say, any classical theory which assumes, as many people do, that a polarising filter just filters has to give the wrong answer.
From section 4, Superposition and indeterminacy, pp, 12-14The general principle of superposition of quantum mechanics... requires us to assume that between these states there exist peculiar relationships such that whenever the system is definitely in one state we can consider it as being partly in each of two or more other states. The original state must be regarded as the result of a kind of superposition of the two or more new states, in a way that cannot be conceived on classical ideas.
Superpositions are weird non-classical things.
Quote from: Bored chemist on 19/10/2020 13:16:48Superpositions are weird non-classical things.Superposition also applies to classical waves in both acoustics and emr (and gravity waves eg water)
My latest experiments using twin polarizers to interact with microwave are meant to resolve this problem. So far the results seem to agree with classical explanation, including the case where those polarizers are electrically connected.