I'm reading an example in which we have two identical particles in the same infinite well. They have different quantum numbers "n", which means that they have different energies. This example is used to introduce us to the need for the symmetry requirement.
I'm confused as to how we know the particles have different energies if we can't tell them apart? The way I see it, if we're not able to identify a location in space in which one particle can be found but the other one isn't, or make any other observation that would distinguish the two particles, how do we know they have different quantum numbers and thus different energies? It seems that for all we know they have the same energy and everything about them is the same.