One of the earliest realizations in the history of quantum mechanics is that matter has a wave-like property. The first to propose this was French physicist Louis de Broglie, who argued that every subatomic particle has a wave associated with it, just like light can behave like both a particle and a wave.
Other physicists soon confirmed this radical idea, especially in experiments where electrons
scattered off a thin foil before landing on a target. The way the
electrons scattered was more characteristic of a wave than a particle.
But then, a question came up: What, exactly, is a wave of matter? What
does it look like?...<<<Read More>>>...