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meopemuk said:I hope you wouldn't argue that the current in metals is produced by discrete electrons. Continuous charge and current fields are just very rough approximations. The discrete nature of the radiation field was demonstrated by Einstein in his 1905 paper about the photo-electric effect.
In the semiclassical picture known to Einstein 1905, currents are produced by discrete electrons. But now, 100 years later, this picture is known to be approximate only, and that currents in metals are in fact produced by the continuous electron fields of QED.
Discrete semiclassical particles are just very rough approximations.
Moreover, the argument of Einstein put forward for the discrete nature of radiation is spurious. As you can read in the standard reference for quantum optics,
L. Mandel and E. Wolf,
Optical Coherence and Quantum Optics,
Cambridge University Press, 1995.
the clicks in a photon detector are an artifact of photodetection caused by the quantum nature of matter, rather than proof of single photons arriving.
Mandel and Wolf write (in the context of localizing photons), about the temptation to associate with the clicks of a photodetector a concept of photon particles. [If there is interest, I can try to recover the details.] The wording suggests that one should resist the temptation, although this advice is usually not heeded. However, the advice is sound since a photodetector clicks even when it detects only classical light! This follows from the standard analysis of a photodetector, which treats the light classically and only quantizes the detector.
Thus the discreteness of the clicks must be caused by the quantum nature of matter, since there is nothing discrete in an incident classical external radiation field.