As site rules forbid links to the Blog where my hypothesis is introduced I have included the initial information as follows:
Are you capable of changing your mind, of really questioning what you've been taught?
If you think you understand the Double-Slit experiment, or even if you don't..........read on.
In his review of Anil Ananthaswamy's splendid book Through Two Doors at Once, Philip Ball said "According to the eminent physicist Richard Feynman, the quantum double-slit experiment puts us up against the paradoxes and mysteries and peculiarities of nature".
Feynman said of the twin slit experiment that it has in it the heart of quantum mechanics and that in reality, it contains the only mystery.
Philip Ball continued in his review to say “By Feynman's logic,
if we could understand what is going on in this deceptively simple experiment, we would penetrate to the heart of quantum theory -
and perhaps all its puzzles would dissolve."
In Through Two Doors at Once, Ananthaswamy concludes that "physics has yet to complete its passage through the double-slit experiment.
The case remains unsolved."
Another quote of Feynman is “I would rather have questions that can’t be answered than answers that can’t be questioned.”
Can we dispel the mystery of quantum mechanics by questioning some of his answers?
The belief that light propagates as a wave is taken by Feynman as proven in the double-slit experiment where it is considered that photons of light waves interfere with each other to produce the patterns seen.
However.........
“
Photons, the fundamental particles of light, do not interact with each other in everyday life.”
http://www.weizmann.ac.il/complex/Firstenberg/quantum-nonlinear-optics-strongly-interacting-photons
And..........
“
Normally, beams of light pass through each other unperturbed.”
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Two-photon_physics
And.........
“
...instead of bouncing off of each other, these beams of light travel in straight lines, ignoring each other entirely.”
https://www.physics.utoronto.ca/~aephraim/PhotonGate/PhotonGate.html
Physics is fully aware that photons of light or any other energy level [or ‘frequency’] DO NOT interfere with each other, therefore it should be known that such an interaction cannot be responsible for the patterns observed in the double-slit experiment.
Is it that physicists just haven't noticed this flaw in a critical fundamental upon which so much else is based, or is a blind eye turned to it as there seems to be no viable explanation utilizing the alternative of light propagating somehow as
a particulate thing?
If we set aside the discussion of 'interference patterns' formed by photons for now and consider the identical results obtained when electrons are used in the twin slit experiment we are able to discern a clear causal process.
[That is provided we are able to see past the confirmation bias displayed in the convenient view that electrons also propagate as a wave rather than as a particle!]
As we know, matter is comprised of atoms in association with each other. This is of course true for the material in which the two slits are formed for the twin slit experiment.
Under normal environmental conditions the atoms of any material thing, including those of the twin slit material, are in constant thermal motion.
In general terms, atoms present a negative charge to their surroundings owing to their electron field.
This charge appears as either a simple or complex spherical field and this field is on a very large scale in comparison with an electron passing in its vicinity.
A negatively charged electron approaching the electron field of an atom will be repelled by the [mobile] negative charge exhibited by that atom.
The direction taken by an electron repelled by the negative field of any atom it encounters is primarily determined by the angle at which the curvature of the atomic field is encountered and the instantaneous motion of the atom at that time.
Consideration of the twin slit material and its behavior at the atomic scale provides a clear picture showing that simultaneous or successive electrons passing through the twin slits will be deflected and scattered across a broad range by the atoms they encounter.
Picture small balls bouncing off very large balls that are constantly moving and jostling each other.
These deflections cause the electrons to encounter the twin slit screen in many places, producing patterns determined largely by the characteristics of the slit material [and the energy (frequency) of the light].
It should be clear that the pattern formed by electrons emitted one at a time to pass through the slits will accumulate the same type of image on a storage screen as that produced immediately by a flood of electrons.
It can be seen that a very similar but not identical pattern emerges with the use of one slit only. The basic mechanism for why this is so should now be apparent to you.
As the twin slit experiment produces identical results for electrons and photons it appears reasonable to conclude that the same or a similar mechanism may be involved in both instances.
"If we want a scientific theory, we also have to require that it describes what we observe. It's science, not maths. This means that the requirement that the assumptions describe what we observe is *necessary to select the theory. And so, one of the reasons for why a scientific theory is correct will always be "Because it describes what we observe"." Sabine Hossenfelder
ANALYSIS METHOD FOR NATURE OF LIGHT
In the world of electronic engineering the process for investigating the cause of the failure of a complex piece of equipment or system is similar to that employed in reverse engineering.
Reverse engineering is a process by which deductive reasoning is utilized in an attempt to understand the
mechanisms by which a device, process, system or software meets its observed performance.
The same process is used to determine what caused a faulty piece of equipment to exhibit its observed failure symptoms.
Logically applied deduction follows a path of successive analysis of immediately prior causes to arrive at conclusions regarding the origins of present observations.
Based upon prior training and experience in addition to logical reasoning, an investigator will consider a range of ‘what if?’ questions while conducting their analysis.
The ability to imagine and analyze what may at first consideration appear to be unlikely or even ridiculous ‘what if?’ questions separates the most successful systems analysts from the majority and can produce valuable results where a more conventional approach may fail to do so.
The Nature of Light.
I came away from a series of lectures by professor Richard Feynman with a feeling of uneasy dissatisfaction and a reluctance to accept the inherent limitation on human knowledge that was implied and seemingly considered reasonable by physicists.
Although fully aware of my own intellectual limitations in comparison with those at the forefront of science I was also aware that many physicists themselves admit [quietly in most instances] that there must be a shortcoming somewhere in the fundamental theory.
Presently accepted concepts fail to account for all known aspects of reality.
Despite my lack of formal education in advanced physics I had the perhaps delusional thought that my considerable and successful experience in the analysis of many diverse complex systems in military and civilian electronic engineering....
as well as in other fields of investigation may have provided me with an advantage not afforded to many qualified scientists when it comes to ascertaining the characteristics light would need to possess to cause it to behave as observed and to do so in all regards.
Applying the concepts of reverse engineering to the well documented behavior of light I asked myself a range of ‘what if?’ questions in an attempt to discover its true nature.
Considering it almost certainly an exercise in futility but determined to either confirm the generally accepted characteristics of light, find answers to satisfy myself or to ultimately conclude that the subject matter is beyond the scope of my capabilities...
I was surprised to conceive a ‘particulate’ photon model that appeared to meet the necessary criteria.
While my model for the nature and behavior of light [photons] may in fact be a pure fantasy, it seemed to work at a fundamental level. But did it explain any physical phenomena?
If you wish to understand how the equivalence of photons and electrons in this experiment could be true I suggest you closely analyze the presentation at
https://www.hereticalphysics.com by going to
The Wayback Machine at:
as the direct hereticalphysics site is no longer in use.
A capable and unspoiled mind should appreciate and gain from the experience, and any comments should confine themselves to analyzing and questioning the ideas explored rather than contrasting them with current beliefs.
Sabine Hossenfelder said in her excellent book Lost in Math “With hindsight one often wonders why a particular conclusion was not drawn earlier, even though the pieces were all there already.”
What do YOU think? Can we dispel some mysteries?