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Quick question concerning the nature of energy: work can definitely be described as a boundary phenomenon, can energy also be categorised as such?
I worked for a short time in the video industry and all the lens assemblies we used had continually variable irises.
I haven't brought this up yet, but here goes.
...in terms of the quantum information...
...Copying information classically never gives you identical copies...
What do you think of the use of modern day information science in theoretical physics?
Do you think there is a better understanding of information these days,
If particles in the Standard Model are fundamental, does that mean they are a form of information...
I think you need to distinguish between mapping (where you lose dimensionality that can be inferred), minimisation (losing genuinely redundant information) and lossless compression (coding recognised sequences into shorter sequences that fully identify the original).
beware of LCD displays on all GPS systems.
How many dots are needed to see the interference pattern from a distance? Is it the same number for any kind of particle?And so on. We know that up close, each particle that leaves a dot actually leaves a lot more than a pointlike mark, but we ignore it.
Er, no. If you are thinking about single-photon two-slit experiments, we know that each receiver event involves a single photon with the same energy as the one that left the transmitter: the photon clearly doesn't split and interfere with itself because that would give you two red dots from each blue photon, but what we observe is a pattern of blue dots.
So how many events constitute a pattern? That is pretty much the same question as how long is a piece of string. The more you know about the cause, the less you need to know about the effect to calculate the entire pattern - a case of fully encoded lossless compression. If I know you have a blue light source and two slits with a defined geometric relation, I can tell you what the interference pattern of an infinity of photons will look like as soon as I have detected just one.
If the laws of physics are constant (which seems to be the case) you would always expect to see the same pattern because the probability distribution will be the same each time.
The question is how many dots are required to recognise that a sampled distribution is consistent with your theoretical continuous distribution.
I'm sure ES has a better grasp of formal statistics than I, but the χ2 "goodness of fit" test is rattling about in the recesses of my memory....
So why no consistent quantum philosophy?
On the other hand I'm embarrassed on behalf of my colleagues if they give you different answers to "what is a photon". It is a quantum of electromagnetic energy, modelled as a particle with zero mass. Anything else would have a different name.