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.
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.