On Fri, 24 Aug 2007 14:40:13 -0600 Michel Fodje <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: The mathematics works but doesn't necessarily mean the current interpretation of the mathematics has any resemblance to what actually happens in reality.
Sure, it does. Crystallography is traditionally derived using classical wave mechanics, but you can take a quantum approach, using the First Born approximation (a single photon scatters elastically from a point source exactly once). If you want to speak about what a single photon does, then you have to resort to that approach. Except in rare instances, the photon interferes only with itself, regardless of how many or how few are present. The particle is the photon, and the wave is the propensity for the photon to appear at a given position on the detector. QM teaches us that the entire experiment, in this case the crystal lattice, has to be taken into account, (which simply means you have to add amplitudes rather than intensities). It is the same thing with a single particle going through a double slit. BOTH slits must be taken into account, as both are possible paths. A crystal is simply a near-infinite diffraction grating in three dimensions, but the physical interpretation is identical. Feynman developed the most intuitive way of looking at this, which is to sum over all possible paths before squaring the wave. Unfortunately, the accompanying mathematical treatment is a bit hairy. Bill