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The Central Mystery of Quantum Mechanics
A gun (obeying classical physics) sprays bullets towards a target.
Before they reach the target, they must pass through a screen with two
slits. If bullets go through the slits they will most likely land directly
behind the slit, but if they come in at a slight angle, they will land
slightly to the sides. The resulting pattern is a map of the likelihood of
a bullet landing at each point.

Double Slit Experiment for Particles
The above two-slit pattern happens to be simply the sum of the patterns
for each slit considered separately: if half the bullets were fired with
only the left slit open and then half were fired with just the right slit
open, the result would be the same.
With waves, however, the result is very different, because of
interference. If the slits were opened one at a time, the pattern would
resemble that for bullets: two distinct peaks. But when both slits are
open, the waves pass through both slits at once and interfere with each
other: where they are in phase they reinforce each other; where they are
out of phase they cancel each other out.

Double Slit Experiment for Waves
Now the quantum paradox: Electrons, like bullets, strike the target one
at a time. Yet, like waves, they create an interference pattern.

Double Slit Experiment for Electrons
If each electron passes individually through one slit, with what does it
"interfere?" Although each electron arrives at the target at a
single place and time, it seems that each has passed through - or somehow
felt the presence of both slits at once. Thus, the electron is understood
in terms of a wave-particle duality.

Illustration of "Wave-Particle Duality"
The wave-particle duality is the central mystery of quantum mechanics–the one to which all others can ultimately
be reduced.
The Classical Solution
Click below to view
animations.
The free electron is a plane lamina disk of charge obeying the de
Broglie relationship that arises from Maxwell's Equations (see the
Classical Physics of the de Broglie Relationship section of Chapter 3 of R.
Mills). As the free electron approaches the slits, its angular momentum
vector (shown in black) is randomly oriented. The electron charge induces
mirror charges on the slits; the resulting interaction causes the electron
to become polarized so that the angular momentum vector is either parallel
or antiparallel to the z-axis, the axis of propagation and the normal to
the plane of the slits.
The interaction of the electron with the slits is mediated by mirror
currents that form on the slits, and photons emitted from the currents.
When a photon interacts with the electron, the angular frequency (de
Broglie wavelength) of the electron changes, with the change matching the
frequency of the photon (see Mills Chapter 3).
For essentially elastic diffraction, the energies are low and the
photons are large, encompassing and emanating from both slits. Each photon
has a quantized angular momentum of h-bar. The angular momentum vector of
the electron precesses about the angular momentum vector of the absorbed
photon.

Animation: Precession of the
free electron about an axis.
Angular momentum vector shown in black.
As a result, some of the momentum is transferred from the z-axis to the
transverse axis. Exactly how much depends on the strength and duration of
the photon-electron interaction. The electron's angular momentum vector is
reoriented upon absorption and emission of one or more photons.
Over time, the incident electron beam statistically produces a uniform
distribution across the slits. The photon pattern is also uniform across
the slits (wherein the statistics is deterministic and local-causal, unlike
the quantum mechanical case). Since the electron and each photon have
quantized angular momentum in units of h-bar, the photon far-field pattern
is imprinted on the electron-beam pattern over time. It is a
transverse-momentum map given by the Fourier transform of the two slit
shape; this arises classically due to conservation of power flow.

The far field distribution.

Sinc Function
The amplitude of the sinc function is due to the periodic reversal of
the electron angular momentum vector. The envelope amplitude is due to the
decreasing probability of electrons landing farther out from center. These
require a stronger electron-photon interaction to get a stronger transverse
momentum transfer, but stronger interactions are less probable.
Since the number of electrons hitting a given position on the detector
over time is proportional to the electron kinetic energy, the intensity
pattern is the square of the amplitude. The predicted result is equivalent
to the observed double slit interference pattern for waves.
Mystery Resolved
According to quantum mechanics, the electron is a point, but
simultaneously everywhere at once, and it goes through both slits
simultaneously, "guided" by a probability wave with a phase that
depends on the position-momentum Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle:

where the phase contains the term Delta-p that is interpreted as the
contribution to the uncertainty in the momentum of the incident particle
on scattering. In the classical picture, the phase also contains the
term Delta-p that is the physical momentum change of the incident
particle on scattering. In both cases, the change in position, Delta-x,
corresponds to the transverse displacement of the particle due to
diffraction.
The electron only goes through one slit but is imprinted with the wave
character of photons that are created across both slits due to
electron-slit interaction. An electromagnetic wave exists. Quantum
mechanics reproduces the mathematics that corresponds to this physical
electromagnetic wave by invoking a nonsensical waving probability. Thus, it
is stuck with the unfortunate result that the "wave-particle duality
is unlike anything in our common everyday experience."
Physics can now be reinstated over mysticism for this simple experiment
with an understanding of the physical nature of fundamental particles. The
details are given in Chapter
8 and Chapter
3 of R. Mills.
2005 BlackLight Power, Inc.
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