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You are absolutely right. I personally have adopten the BSM-SG (developed by Dr. Stoyan Sarg) model which puts very strict limits on the superposition concept. No particle is ever at two places at once nor does it jump around. The model is however much much finer in it's structural organization. A neutrino for example is quite a large object from the BSM perspective. When a photon for example pumps the CL space volume occupied by a electron orbit, there is a limited time in which the CL is pumped in a way that the photon is existing as a complete structure anymore, but the electron is not yet pushed to a higher orbit. Chapter 7 in the book goes in very much detail of this.

This uncertainty is very limited for is existence in time and very limited which processes can implement such uncertainties. From the BSM perspective, looking at the experimental setup, I can not really see, how this will prove uncertainty.



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