- #1
lukephysics
- 60
- 15
- TL;DR Summary
- whys the gun low precision?
With the double slit experiment the first thing I have to ask that is never explained, is why would an electron not always go through one slit? One does not design a gun to fire randomly over an area, but to be fairly precise and accurate in it's firing.
Is there an assumption of the firing pattern of an electron gun, and does each gun have imperfections in its firing accuracy or precision?
I would think that would make a huge difference to the statistics on the measurement. Maybe one gun always does hit one slit due to high precision and low accuracy. Do they do a pre-experiment check of this when they set up the experiments?
Also, another quick q, when they are firing at the slots, do most of the electrons get blocked by the slots? You would think if its low precision, most will pepper the wall around the slots, and only a few get though that happen to line up with the slots. is that correct?
Is there an assumption of the firing pattern of an electron gun, and does each gun have imperfections in its firing accuracy or precision?
I would think that would make a huge difference to the statistics on the measurement. Maybe one gun always does hit one slit due to high precision and low accuracy. Do they do a pre-experiment check of this when they set up the experiments?
Also, another quick q, when they are firing at the slots, do most of the electrons get blocked by the slots? You would think if its low precision, most will pepper the wall around the slots, and only a few get though that happen to line up with the slots. is that correct?
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