AspergianMutantt wrote:
A particle can be a wave or a particle, being in many places at once till measured, and many elementary particles (those that atoms are made of) can do this. In that of measuring the particle it gets used and absorbed (or otherwise considered destroyed).
Now this brings me to wonder, if their correct in this,
A- does this allow us to control where and when that particle will be when we measure it?
B- and if so, instead of measuring it why cant we use this quark of physics to guide into place those particles and coach them into building atoms?
C- and lastly, if an entangled particle affects the opposing particle when measured, does this mean when one is measured the other loses its wave like properties too? or that once entangled neither any longer has that wave like function? I know that once one is measured (and considered destroyed) they are no longer considered entangled.
Note: I did ask this question before on anther forum, a physics forum, but no one responded. they either didn't understand the question, or it was too below them to answer, or too above them to want to attempt to answer.
Any thoughts on these? please share.
A- sort of.... wherever the measuring takes place- that's not exactly control though...
B- not like you want it, although you can always shoot particles at atoms, like in nuclear enrichment.
but subatomic particles don't just stick together.
C-yes. but. google "quantum eraser"- turns out if we destroy our measurement of one particle without looking at it, the entangled particle will appear as wave again. no, I can't explain this, it runs against any sort of intuition.
_________________
I can read facial expressions. I did the test.