It is unanimously accepted that the quantum and the classical
descriptions of the physical reality are very different, although any
quantum process is "mysteriously" transformed through measurement into
an observable classical event. Beyond the conceptual differences,
quantum and classical physics have a lot in common. And, more important,
there are classical and quantum phenomena that are similar although they
occur in completely different contexts. For example, the Schrödinger
equation has the same mathematical form as the Helmholtz equation, there
is an uncertainty relation in optics very similar to that in quantum
mechanics, and so on; the list of examples is very long.
Quantum-classical analogies have been used in recent years to study many
quantum laws or phenomena at the macroscopic scale, to design and
simulate mesoscopic devices at the macroscopic scale, to implement
quantum computer algorithms with classical means, etc. On the other
hand, the new forms of light - localized light, frozen light - seem to
have more in common with solid state physics than with classical optics.
So these analogies are a valuable tool in the quest to understand
quantum phenomena and in the search for new (quantum or classical)
applications, especially in the area of quantum devices and computing.