Paper
25 October 2006 Do we count indivisible photons or discrete quantum events experienced by detectors?
Chandrasekhar Roychoudhuri, Negussie Tirfessa
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 6372, Advanced Photon Counting Techniques; 63720Y (2006) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.691832
Event: Optics East 2006, 2006, Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Abstract
As low light detection technologies are advancing, novel experiments like single molecule spectroscopy, quantum computation, quantum encryption are proliferating. Quantum mechanical detectors can produce only discrete "clicks" at different rates based on the propagating field energy through them, irrespective of whether the photons are divisible or indivisible packets of energy. This is because electrons are quantized elementary particles and they are always bound in quantized energy levels in different quantum systems. Highly successful quantum formalism is not capable of providing the microscopic picture of the processes undergoing during QM interactions; that is left to human imaginations allowing for sustained controversies and mis-interpretations. This paper underscores the paradoxes that arise with the assumption that photons are indivisible elementary particles based on the obvious but generally ignored fact that EM fields do not operate on (interfere with) each other. Then we propose that atomic or molecular emissions emerge and propagate out as space and time finite classical wave packets. We also suggest experiments to validate that the amplitude of a photon wave packet can be split and combined by classical optical components using the specific example of an N-slit grating.
© (2006) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Chandrasekhar Roychoudhuri and Negussie Tirfessa "Do we count indivisible photons or discrete quantum events experienced by detectors?", Proc. SPIE 6372, Advanced Photon Counting Techniques, 63720Y (25 October 2006); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.691832
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CITATIONS
Cited by 11 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Photons

Electrons

Sensors

Diffraction

Molecules

Chemical species

Light wave propagation

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