Ether_Snake
å®å®å®å®å®å®å®å®å®å®å®å®å®å®å®
“New opinions are always suspected, and usually opposed, without any other reason but because they are not already common.” ~ John Locke
A very simple but clear explanation of what is actually happening:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rbRVnC92sMs
A short clip showing a bit of the recent experiments on this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fnUBaBdl0Aw Narrated by Morgan Freeman
They have basically recreate (or revealed) the behavior of quantum mechanics, at macro scale, a few years ago.
They have even reproduced the double slit experiment using the silicon droplets, and it shows that particles don't go through "both slits at once" or anything like that; particles are piloted by their own waves and the waves of previous particles. Sometimes that will draw them into one slit, sometimes the other. There is no need for multiverse, or "collapsing the probability function when observed". The particles are not in multiple places at once. Basically, it's all deterministic, and this experiment illustrates how "quantum mechanics" are deterministic.
There are many videos on youtube covering this.
Here is a video of the original experiment, showing the movement of the particles
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nmC0ygr08tE
The wikipedia article https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pilot_wave
A particle can produce a wave that will move forward, but then the particle can be drawn in another direction by another wave, as seen in the double slit experiment with the droplets; the wave will continue through one slit, as the particle goes along with another wave into the other slit. Hence waves can go on without the particle, and subsequently affect other matter.
edit: A great clear explanatory video, which even explains how we are getting the results we get from the double slit experiment deterministically Bohmian Mechanics- An Alternative to Quantum
Edit:
Worth a read: Why don't more physicists subscribe to pilot wave theory?
Added: Standford Encyclopedia of philosophy's article on Bohmian mechanics
Of the many counterintuitive features of quantum mechanics, perhaps the most challenging to our notions of common sense is that particles do not have locations until they are observed. This is exactly what the standard view of quantum mechanics, often called the Copenhagen interpretation, asks us to believe. Instead of the clear-cut positions and movements of Newtonian physics, we have a cloud of probabilities described by a mathematical structure known as a wave function. The wave function, meanwhile, evolves over time, its evolution governed by precise rules codified in something called the Schrödinger equation. The mathematics are clear enough; the actual whereabouts of particles, less so. Until a particle is observed, an act that causes the wave function to “collapse,” we can say nothing about its location. Albert Einstein, among others, objected to this idea. As his biographer Abraham Pais wrote: “We often discussed his notions on objective reality. I recall that during one walk Einstein suddenly stopped, turned to me and asked whether I really believed that the moon exists only when I look at it.”
But there’s another view — one that’s been around for almost a century — in which particles really do have precise positions at all times. This alternative view, known as pilot-wave theory or Bohmian mechanics
A very simple but clear explanation of what is actually happening:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rbRVnC92sMs
A short clip showing a bit of the recent experiments on this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fnUBaBdl0Aw Narrated by Morgan Freeman
They have basically recreate (or revealed) the behavior of quantum mechanics, at macro scale, a few years ago.
They have even reproduced the double slit experiment using the silicon droplets, and it shows that particles don't go through "both slits at once" or anything like that; particles are piloted by their own waves and the waves of previous particles. Sometimes that will draw them into one slit, sometimes the other. There is no need for multiverse, or "collapsing the probability function when observed". The particles are not in multiple places at once. Basically, it's all deterministic, and this experiment illustrates how "quantum mechanics" are deterministic.
The differences between Bohm and Copenhagen become clear when we look at the classic “double slit” experiment, in which particles (let’s say electrons) pass through a pair of narrow slits, eventually reaching a screen where each particle can be recorded. When the experiment is carried out, the electrons behave like waves, creating on the screen a particular pattern called an “interference pattern.” Remarkably, this pattern gradually emerges even if the electrons are sent one at a time, suggesting that each electron passes through both slits simultaneously.
Those who embrace the Copenhagen view have come to live with this state of affairs — after all, it’s meaningless to speak of a particle’s position until we measure it. Some physicists are drawn instead to the Many Worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics, in which observers in some universes see the electron go through the left slit, while those in other universes see it go through the right slit — which is fine, if you’re comfortable with an infinite array of unseen universes.
By comparison, the Bohmian view sounds rather tame: The electrons act like actual particles, their velocities at any moment fully determined by the pilot wave, which in turn depends on the wave function. In this view, each electron is like a surfer: It occupies a particular place at every specific moment in time, yet its motion is dictated by the motion of a spread-out wave. Although each electron takes a fully determined path through just one slit, the pilot wave passes through both slits. The end result exactly matches the pattern one sees in standard quantum mechanics.

There are many videos on youtube covering this.
Here is a video of the original experiment, showing the movement of the particles
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nmC0ygr08tE
The wikipedia article https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pilot_wave
In theoretical physics, the pilot wave theory was the first known example of a hidden variable theory, presented by Louis de Broglie in 1927. Its more modern version, the de Broglie–Bohm theory, remains a non-mainstream attempt to interpret quantum mechanics as a deterministic theory, avoiding troublesome notions such as wave–particle duality, instantaneous wave function collapse and the paradox of Schrödinger's cat.
The de Broglie–Bohm pilot wave theory is one of several interpretations of quantum mechanics. It uses the same mathematics as other interpretations of quantum mechanics; consequently, it is also supported by the current experimental evidence to the same extent as the other interpretations.
In the 2000s, Couder and colleagues performed experiments[1][2] on hydrodynamic analogs of single-particle quantum systems.[3]
[]
Yves Couder and co-workers in 2010 discovered a macroscopic pilot wave system in the form of walking droplets. This system exhibits behaviour of a pilot wave, heretofore considered to be reserved to microscopic phenomena.
Lucien Hardy[14] and John Stewart Bell[12] have emphasized that in the de Broglie–Bohm picture of quantum mechanics there can exist empty waves, represented by wave functions propagating in space and time but not carrying energy or momentum,[15] and not associated with a particle. The same concept was called ghost waves (or "Gespensterfelder", ghost fields) by Albert Einstein.[15]
A particle can produce a wave that will move forward, but then the particle can be drawn in another direction by another wave, as seen in the double slit experiment with the droplets; the wave will continue through one slit, as the particle goes along with another wave into the other slit. Hence waves can go on without the particle, and subsequently affect other matter.
edit: A great clear explanatory video, which even explains how we are getting the results we get from the double slit experiment deterministically Bohmian Mechanics- An Alternative to Quantum
Edit:
Worth a read: Why don't more physicists subscribe to pilot wave theory?
Added: Standford Encyclopedia of philosophy's article on Bohmian mechanics