Originally posted by Udie
look damnit I wasn't kidding when I said don't get in to the particle/wave thing!
It's natural NOT to understand it.
The reason is that we do not have a macroscopic, everyday analogy for it, that's why you can't imagine a particle that spreads like a wave.
So, is light a wave or a particle? it's neither or both, define it how you please, It simply not like anything you know from daily life.
How do we treat it then, as a wave or as a particle?
quantum mechanics solves it this way:
When dealing with the kinematics, I mean the movement of the "particle", or it's location as function of time, we treat it as a wave. The example is the light going through a pair of slits and giving an interference pattern on a screen (a point particle would pass only though one of the holes and cannot interfere with itself).
When we deal with interaction with the "particle", we consider it to be one "bandle" of energy/momentum. The common example is the photo-electric effect, where a photon absorbed in matter, can only give a certain amount of evergy typical of it's "color".
and here is the connection - the amount of energy in the
particle (or color) is determined by it's
wave frequency (and vice versa).
Bozon