The Ancient Question
What is light? For centuries, physicists fought over the answer.
Newton said light was made of particles — tiny bullets shooting through space. Huygens said it was a wave, rippling through an invisible medium. They couldn't both be right.
Then came the 20th century, and quantum mechanics delivered a verdict that satisfied no one: both answers are correct. Light is neither purely wave nor purely particle. It's something stranger — something that seems to choose its nature based on how you look at it.
But what if you could delay that choice? What if you could wait until after the light had already traveled, and only then decide how to observe it?