Then what about the screen with the spot? — Cartuna
It only leaves a physical trace effect when it is being detected. Otherwise we don't know where it is, because it is nowhere (in physical spacetime). Detection — EnPassant
Just slipping in here. This was considered as a thought experiment in Everett's paper "The Theory of the Universal Wavefunction"; in particular the introduction. There, "the slits" abstracts into any experiment and is S. Your x is A. Your y is B.One experimenter (x) observes the slits and another ( y ) observes x observing the double slit experiment? You know, a god's-eye-view! — Agent Smith
They have never been able to track a single photon infact we have never seen a photon the photon — MAYAEL
The process of photons traveling in spacetime is not visible by itself (you can't enlighten them to make them visible), and in a sense all photons are virtual (so not only the ones between electrically charged particles, being the means for interaction). — Raymond
It has been very well demonstrated that light energy transmits through space, from one place to another, as a wave motion — Metaphysician Undercover
So not being able to see them doesn't mean you can't imagine them to fly in space. The photons can't be seen but they still are there. Like a hidden force of nature. — Raymond
How has this transfer been seen seen then? Light moving through a bottle with liquid? — Raymond
That light transmits as waves is evident from the visual observation of refraction. — Metaphysician Undercover
But how do you visual observe this? — Raymond
The situation can be resolved by looking at the wave function realistically. Considering it to be made up of waving stuff pushing the particle along within its confines. — Raymond
he stuff the wave is made of non-local stuff that dictates the particle where to be without exchanging energy with it. — Raymond
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