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Furthe questions to the RF Photonists amongst you.
On 9/11/2015 1:45 PM, gareth wrote:
"rickman" wrote in message ... On 9/11/2015 1:19 PM, gareth wrote: "rickman" wrote in message ... On 9/11/2015 6:50 AM, gareth wrote: "gareth" wrote in message ... 3. Also, if your RF photons are generated by that same intra-atomic process, then what must be the laser / maser like process that induces all the atoms in a half-wave dipole to produce the photons in the appropriate phase relationship? IN particular this question because of the unpredictable statistical nature of quantum physics, and the dipole radiaition is completely regular and predictable. Statistical does not mean "unpredictable". The oceans are full of individual molecules of water, each moving in a seemingly random manner from thermal perturbations. But in aggregate they exhibit complex and beautiful movement of waves breaking on a jetty just as mandated by quantum mechanics. So, what is the aggregate mechanism in your dipole that has your RF photons all actin in synchronicity? Where does the "synchronicity" requirement come from? Antenna are not lasers. A nice wave emanates from the dipole, and not a collection of wavelets of random phase, and yet individual quantum events seem to be unpredictable Quanta are not wavelets. If you understood QM theory you would realize the two ways of viewing EM waves are not contradictory. Rather they are two different ways of viewing the same phenomena. The *exact* same light emitted by a device will show particle or wave like properties without any difference in how the energy is generated. The only difference is in how it is viewed. -- Rick |
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