- #1
Varon
- 548
- 1
Ballentine mentioned in "The Statistical Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics" published in 1970 in the Review of Modern Physics the following which allegedly showed that the wave-like behavior of a particle if some kind of illusion (now after 40 years, are there no experiments that can refute his statement)??
Ballentine Wrote:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Can you cite just one example of an experiment that can refute what Ballentine mentioned? Implication of what he was claiming was that an electron has no probability wave as described by the Schroedinger Equation.. and this equation described not an individual system but an ensemble.
(Btw... you can read the entire paper of Ballentine published in 1970 by goggling "Ballentine Statistical Interpretation" and click the site with the pdf file)
Ballentine Wrote:
If the expression "wave-particle duality" is to be used at all, it must not be intepreted literally. In the above-mentioned scattering experiment, the scattered portion of the wave function may be equally distributed in all directions (as for an isotropic scatterer), but anyone particle will not spread itself isotropically; rather it will be scatered in some particular direction. Clearly the wave function describes not a single scattered particle but an ensemble of similarly accelerated and scattered particles. At this point the reader may wonder whether a statistical particle theory can account for interference or diffraction phenomena. But there is no difficulty. As in any scattering experiment, quantum theory predicts the statistical frequencies of the various angles through which a particle may be scattered. For a crystal or diffraction grating there is only a discrete set of possible scattering angles because momentum fransfer to and from a periodic object is quantized by a multiple of delta p = h/d, where delta p is the component of momentum tranfer parallel to the direction of the periodic displacement d. This result, which is obvious from a solution of the problem in momentum representation, was first discovered by Duane (1923), although this early paper had been much neglected until its revival by Lande (1955, 1965). There is no need to assume that an electron spreads itself, wavelike, over a large region of space in order to explain diffraction scattering. Rather it is the crystal which is spread out, and the electron interacts with the crystal as a whole through the laws of quantum mechanics. For a longer discussion of this and related problems such as the two-slit experiment, see Lande (1965). In every case a diffraction pattern consists of a statistical distribution of discrte particle events which are separately observative if one looks in fine enough details. In the words of Mott (1964, p. 409), "Students should not be taugh to doubt that electrons, protons and the like are particles ... The wave cannot be observed in any way than by observing particles."
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Can you cite just one example of an experiment that can refute what Ballentine mentioned? Implication of what he was claiming was that an electron has no probability wave as described by the Schroedinger Equation.. and this equation described not an individual system but an ensemble.
(Btw... you can read the entire paper of Ballentine published in 1970 by goggling "Ballentine Statistical Interpretation" and click the site with the pdf file)