Reconsidering the relation between "matter wave interference" and
"wave-particle duality"
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2203.08691v1
- Date: Wed, 16 Mar 2022 15:27:53 GMT
- Title: Reconsidering the relation between "matter wave interference" and
"wave-particle duality"
- Authors: Lukas Mairhofer and Oliver Passon
- Abstract summary: Interference of more and more massive objects provides a spectacular confirmation of quantum theory.
"Wave-particle duality" deserves no place in modern quantum physics.
- Score: 0.0
- License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
- Abstract: Interference of more and more massive objects provides a spectacular
confirmation of quantum theory. It is usually regarded as support for
"wave-particle duality" and in an extension of this duality even as support for
"complementarity". We first give an outline of the historical development of
these notions. Already here it becomes evident that they are hard to define
rigorously, i.e. have mainly a heuristic function. Then we discuss recent
interference experiments of large and complex molecules which seem to support
this heuristic function of "duality". However, we show that in these
experiments the diffraction of a {\em delocalized} center-of-mass wave function
depends on the interaction of the {\em localized} structure of the molecule
with the diffraction element. Thus, the molecules display "dual features" at
the same time, which contradicts the usual understanding of wave-particle
duality. We conclude that the notion of "wave-particle duality" deserves no
place in modern quantum physics.
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