
Originally Posted by
Ken G
Geo Kaplan is right on, and furthermore, this means the answer to your question is "yes"-- it does act like a kind of standing wave. Any kind of particle in a small enough kind of "box" will act that way, it's just that some particles, like baseballs, would need to be in a box so small that it wouldn't even make sense to imagine a baseball inside a box like that, so those are the only kinds of particles for whom wave-particle duality does not make sense (and to analyze such small boxes you have to notice that the baseball is made of constituent particles that are much smaller). For protons and neutrons, the kind of "box" they are in, when in a nucleus, is about the same size as the protons and neutrons, so it stretches the meaning of the "standing wave" picture and you sometimes have to break the protons and neutrons up into their constituent particles too (which are called quarks). Perhaps there is someone who works in nuclear physics that can expound on that.