Understanding the Quantum Delusions: Part 2

So what exactly is energy? Does it have any physical form or existence? If it has physical existence, it becomes nothing but a kind of matter again. If so, then what differentiates this energy stuff from the non-energy stuff? On the other hand, if energy has no physical existence, how does it exist? And how does it influence matter?

For most of us energy is still a mysterious stuff in Nature. The one thing we are certain of energy is that it moves matter particles. Of late scientists realised that energy at the most fundamental level exists as electromagnetic radiation. They also came to know that light is a form of electromagnetic radiation. But what is electromagnetic radiation? Scientists first thought that electromagnetic radiation behaves like waves without any physical existence but later they realised that it has particle or matter properties too. Now scientists are totally confused: energy exists as both waves and particles at the same time, the result of which is quantum mechanics!

That takes us to the first and the foremost difference between classical mechanics and quantum mechanics: According to classical mechanics, waves and particles are totally different things i.e. waves can’t behave like particles and particles can’t behave like waves. But quantum mechanics teaches exactly the opposite: Waves and particles are actually one and the same. Depending upon how we see it, the same thing will appear as a particle at one time and a wave at another time. So it all depends upon how we see something.

Classical rules

First let’s learn about particles and waves from the perspective of classical mechanics. A particle is nothing but a physical entity that has definite mass. We may call the same as a ‘body’ or an ‘object when it is big enough. Apart from mass, there are other features that we can describe for any physical body or particle. They are size, shape, density, position or location and whether it is at rest or moving with respect to us, and if it is moving its velocity, direction etc. Using the principles of classical mechanics, we can exactly predict an object’s position, velocity and its trajectory if we know the object’s mass and the various forces acting upon it.

Waves are not the same as particles or bodies in our classical understanding of physics. A wave is a physical phenomenon by which energy gets transferred in a medium without transfer of the medium’s particles. The attributes of a wave include wavelength, frequency, amplitude etc. The product of wavelength and frequency apparently gives the velocity of a wave (v=ƛf). (Of course this is not true – we will realise this later when we discuss in depth about wave mechanics and wave particle duality)

A wave is not a localised physical entity like a particle but is something like an ill-defined energy cloud, the spatial distribution of which is given by its wavelength and amplitude. And there is nothing called ‘mass’ for a wave. There are some ‘epiphenomena’ specific to waves:- interference, diffraction, scattering etc. Of these, interference is the most important and is said to be the most fundamental of these. When waves from two different sources traveling in a medium come together, the amplitude of the resultant wave will be more at points where the peaks of both waves meet and it will be less at points where the peaks of one wave meet with the troughs of the other. That is waves get cancelled at some points (destructive interference) and get amplified at some points (constructive interference) depending upon their ‘phase difference’ at the point of meeting.

The weird rules of the quantum mechanics

In contrast to what we have discussed above, quantum mechanics teaches that waves and particles are not two different entities but are just one and the same. What we imagine as a wave can behave like a particle and similarly what we imagine as a particle can behave like a wave depending upon how we observe. So what behaves like what depends entirely upon how we observe the same. But what made physicists come to this weird conclusion? Well, it was their observations on light or electromagnetic radiation. Let’s learn about those observations which twisted the scientific minds and squeezed the logical sense out of them.

The first one is Young’s double slit experiment which proved the wave like nature of light by demonstrating interference between two light rays/ photons emitting from two slits in a screen. It is very important that we learn in detail about this simple experiment because it is this experiment that every quantum physicist swears upon to support the weird notion of wave particle duality. But before we talk about light photons in double slit experiment, let’s first learn how bullets (particles) and water waves (waves) would behave in a similar setting.

Particles in double slit experiment: Imagine that we fire a stream of bullets towards a wall with two slit-like openings in it. Most of them will get stopped by the wall but few of them pass to the other side of the wall through the slits to hit the second wall. If the second wall senses and registers every bullet impact that it receives, we would obviously note the following patterns of impacts on the second wall.

Particles- slit1 open

Particles- 1st slit open

Particles- only 2nd slit open

Particles- 2nd slit open

Particles- both slits open

Particles- both slits open

Waves in double slit experiment: Now imagine a series of water waves instead of bullets in the same scenario. As each water wave hits the first wall, part of the wave passes to the other side via each slit. So for each wave that strikes the first wall, two wave fronts emerge on the other side. These wave fronts get scattered and interfere with each other and result in a specific interference pattern on the second wall. At points where the peaks of the two waves come together, the amplitude of the resulting wave gets doubled and at points where the peaks and troughs come together, the amplitude gets nullified and elsewhere it is in between. Let’s look at the patterns of impacts that would be produced by waves in different scenarios of the double slit experiment.

Water waves - only 1st slit open

Water waves – only 1st slit open

Water waves- only 2nd slit open

Water waves- only 2nd slit open

Water waves with both slits open

Water waves with both slits open

So obviously waves and particles produce different patterns of impacts on the second wall. But how do light rays behave in the same scenario?

In 1803, Thomas Young had shown that light behaved exactly like water waves and produced wave like interference patterns on the second wall as shown below.

Light- only 1st slit open

Light- only 1st slit open

pattern of hits produced (only 1st slit open)

pattern of hits produced (only 1st slit open)

Light- only 2nd slit open

Light- only 2nd slit open

pattern of hits produced (only 2nd slit open)

pattern of hits produced (only 2nd slit open)

Light with both slits open

Light with both slits open

Pattern of hits produced by light when both slits are open

Pattern of hits produced by light when both slits are open

Compare the above with the pattern of hits produced by particles when both slits are open-

Particles- both slits open

Particles- both slits open

pattern of hits produced by particles when both slits are open

pattern of hits produced by particles when both slits are open

This observation had actually overthrown the corpuscular or particle theory of light that was put forward by Newton and dominated the scientific society for more than two centuries.

But then in 1901, Max Planck, from his observations on black body radiation, suggested that electromagnetic radiation comes in discreet bits or quanta just like how matter particles would exist. And later Einstein in 1905 confirmed the particle like behaviour of light from his work on photoelectric effect. As a matter of interest, Einstein had actually received Noble prize not for his theory of relativity which made him so popular but for his work on photoelectric effect which demonstrated the particle like behaviour of light rays.

Photoelectric effect: When light rays were made to fall upon a metal plate, scientists found that they ejected electrons from the metal plate and produced electric current. When scientists analysed the velocity and the number of electrons ejected from the metal plate, it became clear that light rays actually behaved like showers of particles while knocking down the electrons from the atoms of the metal plate. And scientists couldn’t explain the observed patterns of photoelectric current if they imagined light rays as waves. That is to say, wave model of light failed to explain the photoelectric effect.

So while the double slit experiment demonstrated the wave like behaviour of light, photoelectric effect suggested that light behaved like particles. Astonished by this ‘bizarre’ behaviour of light, de Broglie put forward a highly logical argument i.e. if electromagnetic waves can behave like particles, then why not matter particles behave like waves? In the years to come, electrons were shown to behave like waves by various experiments as predicted by de Broglie and and wave particle duality of matter became an accepted ‘reality’.

Then came the main problem for the physicists to solve. If light is composed of particles, how could one explain the interference patterns produced by the same in the double slit experiment? Even when light photons were emitted one at a time rather than in streams or showers, the same interference pattern was observed on the photosensitive screen after a sufficient number of photons got fired. This implied that each particle went through both the slits simultaneously, emerged on the other side and interfered with itself. How could any particle go through two paths at the same time? How could a particle interfere with itself? This happened not only with photons, but scientists observed the same phenomenon with electrons and other particles.

This combined with many other counterintuitive observations and the need to explain the wave like behaviour of particles forced the physicists to formulate the weird rules of the quantum world:

1) Feynman’s multiple histories: An electron or a photon during its flight from point A to point B travels simultaneously in infinite number of paths and apparently what we see or observe is the average of all these paths.

A—————x————–y————z—————–B

Amongst the infinite number of paths that a particle takes simultaneously as it travels from point A to point B, could include a trip to the moon or even to the other side of the universe before the particle reaches point B. Even weird is that, the particle can apparently be observed at any of the x, y, z points between A to B if we decide to observe it, but if we don’t ‘look’ at it, it can be wandering anywhere in the universe. It is as if the particle knows where and when someone is going to watch its behaviour. We have to believe in this odd behaviour of tiny particles because they appear to pass through both the slits simultaneously in the ‘double slit experiment’. So the reality we perceive (i.e. the observed path from A to B) is apparently just one of the several probabilities/ histories/ realities.

2) Quantum uncertainty- The position and the velocity of a particle can’t be accurately known simultaneously. Moreover, a particle doesn’t exist at just one position but exists simultaneously in a number of positions.

3) A particle or body can be in multiple states simultaneously as long as we don’t ‘look’ at them. For example a radioactive atom can be in both decayed and not yet decayed state, a cat can be both dead and alive, a door can be in both closed and not closed (and partially closed) positions at the same time, a table can be both present and yet not present in our room and so on. But why we don’t experience such funny things in our daily life? The reason is that things exist in multiple states only when we don’t observe them. The moment we observe them, they quickly ‘settle’ to one state. Imagine that we have just seen a cat inside a wooden cage in the centre of a room. We may think that they continue to remain so even when we turn our eyes away or walk out of the room. But apparently we can’t be certain of their state when we don’t look at them- It may be that the cat lies outside the cage, it may be that the cat is dead and the cage doesn’t exist in the room but is in the forest being made. Or the cage may be sitting on the head of the cat or it may be that while the cage goes on a trip to the moon, the cat is dancing behind you. That is, they could be in any of the infinite number of possible states. But the moment we look back, the cat and the cage may be seen just as before as if nothing had happened.

4) In our classical world we can predict the ‘fate’ of any individual object if we know all the forces acting upon it, but apparently the same is not possible in the quantum world. For example despite knowing everything about a radioactive atom, we cannot exactly predict what will happen to it after some time, whether it decays or not and if it decays when it is going to decay. Apparently we can only know the probability of an event happening in a given time. For example we may be able say ‘there is 50% chance of a particular atom getting decayed in 24hrs’. Or we may be able say ‘50% of the atoms of a given radioactive substance get decayed in 20years’. But we can’t say exactly which atoms decay and at what point of time they decay.

Of course, even in our everyday world we cannot accurately predict the outcomes of individual events in many scenarios and we may only be able to ‘guess’ the probabilities of a particular outcome. For example, when we toss a coin, we can’t exactly say which way it will land. We can only say that there is a 50% chance for landing head on and 50% for tail on. But why are we unable to exactly predict the outcome of every coin tossing? The reason is that we can’t / don’t have all the information about all the forces acting upon the coin. In other words, the uncertainty of our macroscopic world is to do with our inability and ignorance. But apparently this is not the case with the uncertainty of the quantum world. The reason why our physicists are unable to predict individual events of quantum world is apparently because the Nature itself doesn’t know for sure. So physicists know as much as Nature knows about things in the quantum world despite their vast ignorance in the easily accessible macroscopic world!

Luckily for the scientists, despite all its weird rules, quantum mechanics has been highly successful in explaining various phenomena in Nature both at microscopic and macroscopic levels. And it has helped scientists invent many gadgets of modern society. Does it mean that quantum physics is correct? While most scientists believe that our world is really weird and swear by what the quantum mechanics preaches, there are some who remain sceptical. Apparently the mathematics of quantum mechanics and that of general relativity are not compatible with one another. It implies that the mere success of a mathematical model in explaining certain things in Nature doesn’t automatically mean that the model is correct.

And why should the basic physical principles or the laws of Nature be different in the microscopic and macroscopic worlds? We will explore the truth in other chapters.

Double Slit Experiment as Proof of Akash (Ether)

“If studying quantum mechanics doesn’t make you dizzy, you haven’t understood it” Neils Bohr, the father of quantum physics.

“If you are not completely confused by quantum mechanics, you do not understand it” John Wheeler.

“Quantum mechanics makes absolutely no sense” Roger Penrose.

“I think it is safe to say that no one understands quantum mechanics. Nobody knows how it can be like that” the great physicist Richard Feynman.

That’s how the great physicists themselves had felt about quantum physics, so we could imagine how it would be like for the fresh science graduates and the lay people. Yes, Quantum physics is full of absurdities and counterintuitive notions. According to this weird science, a particle can exist at multiple locations simultaneously, a particle can travel via multiple routes simultaneously, a cat can be both dead and alive, a door can be both open and shut etc etc at the same time. And then wave-particle duality, quantum entanglement, superposition, multiple universes and so on and so forth… there exist so many mystical notions in quantum physics that defy our logic.

But why did our physicists come to those strange conclusions that made no sense, even to them? Well, apparently, that is what the results of the double slit experiment (DSE) implied. In this article we will take a relook at the Double Slit Experiment and see if we can make some sense out of this great historical experiment.

Thomas Young, a British physician turned physicist, conceived and devised this experiment in the early 1800s. When light photons were fired in this double slit experiment, they produced a wave-like interference pattern on the detector screen which implied that each photon was traveling through both the slits like a wave. But how can a particle pass through both slits like a wave? If we can solve this puzzle, we can dispense with all the absurd teachings of quantum physics.

Imagine that we are undertaking the double slit experiment and studying the behaviour of water molecules. For this, we have a water gun which can shoot water molecules at any desired rate i.e. it can shoot water molecules one by one or in a continuous shower like manner. And we have a screen with 2 slits in it and behind this we have a ‘hydrosensitive’ screen which records the impacts of water molecules at various points on it. Now we shoot showers of water molecules with our water gun towards the slits in the first screen. While most of the water molecules get stopped by the screen, some of them pass through the slits and go on to hit the detector screen behind. We study the distribution of the hits on the detector screen. It is no surprise that we see the following pattern (two bands corresponding to the slits).

DSE water particles

Then we shoot water molecules one by one with our water gun. As our gun is not the best shooter in the world, it shoots the water molecules a bit randomly i.e. each molecule it shoots goes in a slightly different direction. So again, while most of the molecules get stopped by the first screen, some of the molecules pass through the slits and reach the detector screen. After a sufficient number of molecules have been shot, we study the distribution of hits on the ‘hydrosensitive’ detector screen. It is again no surprise that we see the same pattern (i.e two bands) as noted above. This is obviously what we would expect from particles in our everyday world. We may call this as ‘particle pattern’ of distribution in contrast to the interference pattern we get when waves are ‘fired’ in DSE. So far we have found nothing too exciting or weird.

Now let’s place our whole set up inside a large container (or a sea) of still water and repeat the experiment. Let’s presume that our ‘hydrosensitive’ detector screen, despite being surrounded by water, doesn’t record any ‘hits’ because the molecules are absolutely still and as such are not hitting the hydrosensitive screen. Of course in reality, water molecules will never be absolutely still (except probably at absolute zero temperature), so adjoining molecules keep colliding with the detector screen. But these random collisions by the adjoining water molecules will only produce a diffuse/uniform distribution of hits on the entire detector screen without any specific pattern or bands. We could ignore that as ‘background noise’ or set that as zero reading.

Now let’s ‘trigger’ our water gun to shoot water molecules one by one. After a sufficient number of molecules have been shot, we study the pattern of impacts recorded on the detector screen. What kind of pattern do you expect on the detector screen?

Interestingly, we don’t get the previously noted particle pattern (or two band pattern) now despite the fact that we have fired the water particles exactly as before. Rather we get interference pattern (or multiple band pattern) as shown below, which is characteristic of waves.

DSE water waves

Of course it is not difficult to explain why the particle pattern vanishes here and gives way to the interference or wave pattern:- Each water particle that gets fired initiates a wave in the still water which travels towards the first screen. While most of the wave gets reflected back by the screen, a portion of the wave passes through each slit and emerges on the other side as a ‘daughter wave’. Because there are two slits, there are going to be two such daughter waves or wavelets. These two ‘wavelets’ spread and interfere with each other and result in the interference pattern observed on the detector screen.

So what made the particle pattern vanish here and give way to the interference or wave pattern? Obviously it is the water environment which is responsible for the appearance of the wave pattern. Outside the water tank, the water particles produced only two bands. Now the question comes, if water environment could make water particles to produce wave like interference pattern, what environment could make photon particles produce the same? It must be obviously a photon environment. So the fact that photons cause wave like interference pattern in DSE implies that our world is immersed in an ocean of photons.

DSE photons

So when we fire a photon, it would initiate a tiny wave in the ocean of photons, which would then travel through both the slits and produce the interference pattern on the detector screen. Now it is no surprise that photon particles produce wave like interference pattern in DSE if we propose that our universe is immersed in an ocean of photons. Thus double slit experiment provides a direct proof of the existence of cosmic ocean of photons (Akash or Ether, one of the five elements of Nature or ‘Pancha Bhutas’). And unlike what the quantum physicists believe, a photon as such doesn’t pass through both the silts but it is the wave generated by the fired photon which passes through both the slits.

I have explained elsewhere why Michelson’s experiment doesn’t disprove Ether and how it actually disproves the superstition that speed of light is constant. I have also explained elsewhere how the so called aberration of star light fits in with the Ether model and also talked about the ‘rain-umbrella story’ which the physicists are unduly fond of reciting while promoting their relativity ideology. Apart from solving the DSE puzzle and demystifying the quantum mechanics, this Akash or Photon Ether model explains so many other mysterious phenomena in simple and clear terms.

Gravity – Whirlpool model: Just like how an object spinning in water creates a whirlpool around it and draws objects towards it, Earth spinning in the ocean of photons could be creating a similar whirlpool around it and dragging objects towards it. So gravity is no longer a mystery and no mythical and absurd concepts like bending of space or warping of space as suggested by Relativity theory. The whirlpools in the photonic ocean generated by the spinning celestial bodies also explains the so called gravitational waves.

Inertia and mass: Existence of Akash or Ether explains why there is something called inertia and thus explains mass. Ether is probably what represents the Higg’s field and photons the so called God’s particles. The funny thing here is that scientists have disproved Ether only to reintroduce it with a different name and flavor!

Next we can describe the so called electromagnetic waves in simple and clear terms. They are nothing but waves in the ocean of photons and they are no different from the water waves in an ocean of water. But our science text books describe them as ‘self propagating electric and magnetic fields oscillating in perpendicular planes in vacuum’ no one can understand what that really means. Finally we can explain the so called red shift and cosmic microwave background radiation etc and dispense with the theory of Big Bang.

Electrons and double slit experiment : To explain the interference pattern produced by photons, we have proposed the existence ‘photon Ether’ which is nothing but a sea of photons pervading this entire universe. But how do we explain the interference pattern produced by electrons? Do we need to propose now the existence of what may be called as ‘electron Ether’ in addition to the ‘photon Ether’ or ‘lumiferous Ether’ described above? Absolutely not. In fact, not only electrons but many other particles (even ‘clumps’ of carbon atoms called buckyballs) were observed to behave like waves in the double slit experiment and we can explain all of them by the same Ether model.