- #1
kw1
- 7
- 1
I routinely read that in quantum theory, measurement 'collapses' the wave function. I am unlikely (a geneticist, not a physicist) to understand this very well, but I think my central question is not entirely naive. Whatever the measurement 'collapse' effect really means, I don't understand what the very idea means.
Yes, we set up a detector to 'measure' some quantum phenomenon. But, particle or wave (or both), it would seem that photons, or whatever, are interacting with the world all the time and everywhere (because there is energy and matter, objects and waves etc, everywhere), so I cannot see why a physicist using a photon detector (or whatever) is doing anything the the target wavicle that isn't happening to it all the time and everywhere? Why is the detector not just one of infinitely many 'obstacles' in the photon's path? What makes a physicist's detector any different from everything else all around all the time? How, in that sense, does any 'thing' (photon, etc) ever go un-interfered with?
Yes, we set up a detector to 'measure' some quantum phenomenon. But, particle or wave (or both), it would seem that photons, or whatever, are interacting with the world all the time and everywhere (because there is energy and matter, objects and waves etc, everywhere), so I cannot see why a physicist using a photon detector (or whatever) is doing anything the the target wavicle that isn't happening to it all the time and everywhere? Why is the detector not just one of infinitely many 'obstacles' in the photon's path? What makes a physicist's detector any different from everything else all around all the time? How, in that sense, does any 'thing' (photon, etc) ever go un-interfered with?