- #36
padraighaz
- 15
- 0
Thanks Edgardo for your post. This is the kind of analysis I vaguely remember learning decades ago and the coherence length is what I had in mind for the scale length in the direction of motion, where you needed a superposition of components to generate a finite wavepacket.
My original question concerned transverse scales since I was wondering how wide is a photon and couldn't remember having learned anything about this. If it can be as wide as the slit separation, it's no big deal to point out single photon interference requires a photon to go through both slits at once etc. etc. Couldn't one argue that a double-slit single photon experiment is a detector of transverse scales? There might not be a single unique scale; there might be a distribution - in which case interference will still occur over a range of slit separations - but the existence of the distribution is interesting in and of itself, and so is the fact (if this interpretation it correct) that the photons in this case have transverse macroscopic physical dimensions. This passing through both slits at once issue becomes less so under these circumstances.
My original question concerned transverse scales since I was wondering how wide is a photon and couldn't remember having learned anything about this. If it can be as wide as the slit separation, it's no big deal to point out single photon interference requires a photon to go through both slits at once etc. etc. Couldn't one argue that a double-slit single photon experiment is a detector of transverse scales? There might not be a single unique scale; there might be a distribution - in which case interference will still occur over a range of slit separations - but the existence of the distribution is interesting in and of itself, and so is the fact (if this interpretation it correct) that the photons in this case have transverse macroscopic physical dimensions. This passing through both slits at once issue becomes less so under these circumstances.