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At the expense of any pretensions of historical accuracy, 
I am going to see how many interesting conclusions we can 
draw from one simple hypothesis posed by 
Louis Victor Pierre Raymond duc de Broglie 
in his 26-page doctoral thesis in 1924.  
It had been shown two decades earlier 
that light, which is certainly a wave, 
comes quantized in clumps like particles 
(called photons) with the energy of each photon 
equal to Planck's constant times its frequency:  ,
where
,
where 
 J-s is Planck's constant.  
(It was the explanation of this phenomenon in 1905 
that won Albert Einstein the Nobel prize.  
Relativity was just gravy.)  
It had already been shown earlier still 
(in the late Nineteenth Century) 
that an electromagnetic wave carries both energy E 
and momentum p, in the ratio E = pc where 
c is the speed of light.  This ratio holds also 
for quantized photons, which therefore have momentum
 J-s is Planck's constant.  
(It was the explanation of this phenomenon in 1905 
that won Albert Einstein the Nobel prize.  
Relativity was just gravy.)  
It had already been shown earlier still 
(in the late Nineteenth Century) 
that an electromagnetic wave carries both energy E 
and momentum p, in the ratio E = pc where 
c is the speed of light.  This ratio holds also 
for quantized photons, which therefore have momentum 
 .
But for any wave,
.
But for any wave, 
 ,
so
,
so 
 given in terms of its momentum p by Eq. (1).  
This simple suggestion was the basis for the 
 WAVE/PARTICLE DUALITY that has perplexed 
generations of Physics students ever since 
(and formed the basis for all  QUANTUM MECHANICS).  
But suppose we just take it at face value and examine 
a few ``obvious'' consequences.
given in terms of its momentum p by Eq. (1).  
This simple suggestion was the basis for the 
 WAVE/PARTICLE DUALITY that has perplexed 
generations of Physics students ever since 
(and formed the basis for all  QUANTUM MECHANICS).  
But suppose we just take it at face value and examine 
a few ``obvious'' consequences.  
 
 
 
 
 
