There's particles physics, which has endless problems, then the better model of wave theory. It works for me every time I say -- "goodbye".... even at a distance.
There isn't really any such thing as a "particle" in particle physics. A particle is pretty much defined to be "what is measured at the moment a wave collapses." In other words, particle physics is a wave theory, through and through.
Or perhaps a better way of saying it is, all that exists are "fields" (in the standard model/particle physics), where waves are perturbations of a field, or rather, how the field changes over time, and "particles" are measurements of that field. No actual particles really exist in any of physics.
Good explanation there, and I do appreciate it. However, you completely missed my facetious remark. I can see that I going to need to 'wave' goodbye now.
How is that contrary to the Standard Model?
There's particles physics, which has endless problems, then the better model of wave theory. It works for me every time I say -- "goodbye".... even at a distance.
There isn't really any such thing as a "particle" in particle physics. A particle is pretty much defined to be "what is measured at the moment a wave collapses." In other words, particle physics is a wave theory, through and through.
Or perhaps a better way of saying it is, all that exists are "fields" (in the standard model/particle physics), where waves are perturbations of a field, or rather, how the field changes over time, and "particles" are measurements of that field. No actual particles really exist in any of physics.
Good explanation there, and I do appreciate it. However, you completely missed my facetious remark. I can see that I going to need to 'wave' goodbye now.