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Home > Wave-particle duality


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In physics, wave-particle duality holds that light and matter simultaneously exhibit properties of waves and of particles (or photons). This concept is a consequence of quantum mechanics.



1 Fresnel, Maxwell, and Young

In the early 1800s, the double-slit experiments by Young and Fresnel provided evidence for Huygens' theories: these experiments showed that when light is sent through a grid, a characteristic interferenceIn communications, interference is anything which alters, modifies, or disrupts a message; as it travels along a channel, between a source and a receiver. Below is an article about the physical phenomenon of wave interference. See also the legal concept o patternA pattern is a form or model (or, more abstractly, a set of rules) which can be used to make or to generate things or parts of a thing, especially if the things that are generated have enough in common for the underlying pattern to be inferred or discerne is observedObservation basically means watching something and taking note of anything it does. For instance, you might observe a bird flying by watching it closely. The sciences of biology and astronomy have their historical basis in observations by amateurs. There, very similar to the pattern resulting from the interference of waterDrinking water This article focuses on water as we experience it every day. The water (molecule) article describes water from a scientific and technical perspective. Water is an abundant substance on Earth. It exists in many forms, such as sea, rain, and waves; the wavelength of light can be computedComputation Discrete mathematics Computation can be defined as finding a solution to a problem from given inputs by means of an algorithm. This is what the theory of computation a subfield of computer science and mathematics, deals with. For thousands of from such patterns. MaxwellJames Clerk Maxwell ( June 13, 1831 November 5, 1879) was a Scottish physicist, born in Edinburgh. Maxwell developed a set of equations expressing the basic laws of electricity and magnetism as well as the Maxwell distribution in the kinetic theory of gas, during the late- 1800s, explained light as the propagation of electromagnetic waves with the Maxwell equations. These equations were verified by experiment, and Huygens' view became widely accepted.

2 Einstein and photons

In 1905, Einstein reconciled Huygens' view with that of Newton; he explained the photoelectric effect (an effect in which light did not seem to act as a wave) by postulating the existence of photons, quanta of energy with particulate qualities. Einstein postulated that light's frequency, ν, is related to the energy, E, of its photons:

,

where h is Planck's constant (6.626 x 10-34 J seconds).



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