Spoiler
DID YOU THINK ABOUT IT?
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NO, SERIOUSLY, THINK ABOUT IT.
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I AM NOT KIDDING.
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Okay, here's the answer. There's no contradiction. To see why, think about what a "particle" is and what a "wave" is. A "particle" is just pure position. In other words, a "particle" is something that's completely localized. It's intuitively appealing to us because things in our realm of experience have positions, and can be represented as particles -- for instance, billiard balls, airplanes, or planets. A wave is a self-propagating "disturbance" in some medium. Lots of things in our realm of experience can be represented as waves, like wind, water waves, or earthquakes.
We try to make sense of physical observations by tying them to our experience. So when we think of planets orbiting the Sun, we think of points on a plane moving in a central force field. Here, a particle is a good description of what's going on. Or when we think of molecules or atoms, we think of them as particles. Collisions are elastic, they're all bouncing around, they're localized --- again, a good description.
Similarly, interference is something waves do. So when light interferes with itself, we say it's a wave.
Are they actually particles? Well, what does that even mean? Asking for the "real," "intrinsic" nature of things is meaningless (and Aristotelian and maybe if you want to you should be a devout Catholic) -- things "are" what the best description of their observed properties says they are.
So is light a wave or a particle? The answer is, neither, because the best description of light is not as a wave and is not as a particle. The best description of light is as a ... well, I don't know QED well enough to say for certain. But it's not a wave, and it's not a particle.
-----
NO, SERIOUSLY, THINK ABOUT IT.
-----
I AM NOT KIDDING.
----
Okay, here's the answer. There's no contradiction. To see why, think about what a "particle" is and what a "wave" is. A "particle" is just pure position. In other words, a "particle" is something that's completely localized. It's intuitively appealing to us because things in our realm of experience have positions, and can be represented as particles -- for instance, billiard balls, airplanes, or planets. A wave is a self-propagating "disturbance" in some medium. Lots of things in our realm of experience can be represented as waves, like wind, water waves, or earthquakes.
We try to make sense of physical observations by tying them to our experience. So when we think of planets orbiting the Sun, we think of points on a plane moving in a central force field. Here, a particle is a good description of what's going on. Or when we think of molecules or atoms, we think of them as particles. Collisions are elastic, they're all bouncing around, they're localized --- again, a good description.
Similarly, interference is something waves do. So when light interferes with itself, we say it's a wave.
Are they actually particles? Well, what does that even mean? Asking for the "real," "intrinsic" nature of things is meaningless (and Aristotelian and maybe if you want to you should be a devout Catholic) -- things "are" what the best description of their observed properties says they are.
So is light a wave or a particle? The answer is, neither, because the best description of light is not as a wave and is not as a particle. The best description of light is as a ... well, I don't know QED well enough to say for certain. But it's not a wave, and it's not a particle.