Is Quantum Reality Truly Uncertain or Just a Misunderstanding?

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In summary, the conversation discusses the two interpretations of quantum theory: the first being that reality consists of a haze of all possibilities that only collapses into a single outcome when observed, and the second being that the issue is uncertainty of knowledge rather than uncertainty of fact. The speaker believes the latter interpretation is more plausible and questions why certified geniuses would believe otherwise. They also mention experimental evidence and principles in support of the intrinsic nature of quantum mechanics.
  • #1
mikecorn
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This may be inappropriate for this forum. If so, please suggest where I should post a question like this. Thanks.


Brian Green writing in the NY Times:

<<
Instead, the proponents of quantum theory claimed, reality consists of a haze of all possibilities - all trajectories - mutually commingling and simultaneously unfolding. And why don't we see this? According to the quantum doctrine, when we make a measurement or perform an observation, we force the myriad possibilities to ante up, snap out of the haze and settle on a single outcome. But between observations - when we are not looking - reality consists entirely of jostling possibilities.

Quantum reality, in other words, remains ambiguous until measured. The reality of common perception is thus merely a definitive-looking veneer obscuring the internal workings of a highly uncertain cosmos. Which is where Einstein drew a line in the sand. A universe of this sort offended him; he could not accept, as he put it, that "the Old One" would so profoundly incorporate a hidden element of happenstance in the nature of reality. Einstein quipped to his quantum colleagues, "Do you really think the Moon is not there when you're not looking?" and set himself the Herculean task of reworking the laws of physics to resurrect conventional reality.
>>

When I was a young student of elementary physics, the above description of quantum theory is what I called "uncertainty of fact". Events on a small scale have many outcomes, and only when someone looks at such an event, do the many outcomes resolve into a single observed outcome. Schrödinger's cat is the famous outcome of this thinking, or Einstein's questioning of the moon's existence when no one is looking at it.

I have always believed that this was BS, and that the issue was uncertainty of knowledge rather than uncertainty of fact. Small events have one outcome, even when no one is looking. This one outcome is not predictable in advance, since the theory allows for many possible outcomes, each one with a probability, and the sum of these probabilities being 1. I find this much easier to swallow than Schrödinger's cat.

I never went on to master physics, but I have continued to wonder about this question. Recently I asked a friend who is a professor of physics at a university, and he agreed with the second interpretation. Now I wonder why Brian Green and other certified geniuses apparently buy the first interpretation.
 
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  • #2
mikecorn said:
This may be inappropriate for this forum. If so, please suggest where I should post a question like this. Thanks.


Brian Green writing in the NY Times:

<<
Instead, the proponents of quantum theory claimed, reality consists of a haze of all possibilities - all trajectories - mutually commingling and simultaneously unfolding. And why don't we see this? According to the quantum doctrine, when we make a measurement or perform an observation, we force the myriad possibilities to ante up, snap out of the haze and settle on a single outcome. But between observations - when we are not looking - reality consists entirely of jostling possibilities.

Quantum reality, in other words, remains ambiguous until measured. The reality of common perception is thus merely a definitive-looking veneer obscuring the internal workings of a highly uncertain cosmos. Which is where Einstein drew a line in the sand. A universe of this sort offended him; he could not accept, as he put it, that "the Old One" would so profoundly incorporate a hidden element of happenstance in the nature of reality. Einstein quipped to his quantum colleagues, "Do you really think the Moon is not there when you're not looking?" and set himself the Herculean task of reworking the laws of physics to resurrect conventional reality.
>>

When I was a young student of elementary physics, the above description of quantum theory is what I called "uncertainty of fact". Events on a small scale have many outcomes, and only when someone looks at such an event, do the many outcomes resolve into a single observed outcome. Schrödinger's cat is the famous outcome of this thinking, or Einstein's questioning of the moon's existence when no one is looking at it.

I have always believed that this was BS, and that the issue was uncertainty of knowledge rather than uncertainty of fact. Small events have one outcome, even when no one is looking. This one outcome is not predictable in advance, since the theory allows for many possible outcomes, each one with a probability, and the sum of these probabilities being 1. I find this much easier to swallow than Schrödinger's cat.

I never went on to master physics, but I have continued to wonder about this question. Recently I asked a friend who is a professor of physics at a university, and he agreed with the second interpretation. Now I wonder why Brian Green and other certified geniuses apparently buy the first interpretation.

While what you ask is certainly a good question, it, unfortunately, has been discussed and debated to death on here (and no, this isn't your fault and I'm not putting any blame on anyone). The schrodinger cat-type effect (i.e. the illustration of superposition where orthorgonal states exist simultaneously) HAS experimental verifications (read H2 molecule, Stony Brook/Delft SQUIDs experiments, etc.) And Heisenberg uncertainty principle (HUP) is also an observational fact (example: diffraction from a single slit - I have covered this at length in one of my journal entry if you wish to read it. Furthermore, the de Boer effect especially in noble gasses would be unexplainable without this principle).

There are many indications that QM is describing something intrinsic, rather than simply our state of knowledge of a system. This is very much unlike classical statistical mechanics whereby the statistics merely reflect our ignorance of the system. Classical statistics does not contain observables that is a result of superposition of states. QM does (bonding-antibonding states producing an energy gap between the two).

So no, I would disagree with your (and your professor's) interpretation, simply because of all the experimental observations that we already have.

Zz.
 
  • #3
Actually, I believe it was Enrico Fermi who used to jokingly ask his collegues if the moon was there if no-one was looking at it. He knew it was a silly question but what the quantum mechanical answer was to it is what he wanted to know.

Many brilliant physicists such as Gell-Mann and Hartle have been working on answering this question and removing the related ideas that "measurements" and "observers" are in any way important or that wavefunctions "collapse".

Schrodinger's cat is now just dead or alive and it stays that way, measurements or not. Decoherence enforces this.

I'm struggling away to learn what it all really means, though, so don't ask me for answers, as I can provide only directions. :smile:
 
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  • #4
HUP is a technological limitation. True or False?

In quantum physics, the HUP expresses a limitation on accuracy of simultaneous measurement of observables such as the position and the momentum of a particle and is sometimes explained by claiming that the measurement of position necessarily disturbs a particle's momentum. In other words what this is saying is that our method of gathering information (eg. bouncing a photon(s) off of it) will disturb the wavefunction of the particle we are detecting, we alter its position and momentum - think classical mechanics of colliding objects if you want, in a QM sense it could be charge or whatever based but the effect is comparable. We cannot yet achieve a "look but don't touch" method of gathering information. If we could, then that solves a lot of questions/problems. So to answer my own question, I would say Yes the HUP is a technological limitation, that eventually I believe we will get around. It should be as simple as substracting the jolt given to the particle upon detection to get the state of the particle had we not influenced it (anyone know what I'm saying?) but that in itself is not so simple.

On the idea regarding a myrid of possibilities converging to a single outcome, a single result. Well what are you saying? That another answer at another location does not exsist? You have to consider that this comes about as a function of time(s) and the exact relationship between time(s) and your angle or method of detection - this is not something unique to the QM world. A particles position and momentum are ever changing and perhaps even repeating so if we have our focus on an area that we know it has or will pass through, any information we gather regards it as what was the system (part of the system) like at t time at l location and if possible can we then go on to predict the future or past - but again our measurement affects the future hence quite an uncertainty in QM arises.

QM collisions are different than classical mechanics macro objects collisions where we have a good idea of all the meaningful varibles involved (including gravity which QM doesn't) and not disturb the system because any disturbance of observation (force of photons, or whatever particles coming into contact) is neglegible.

I wanted to comment on diffraction patterns from a slit also. It is my belief that this pattern (multiple bands/patterns actually) comes about due to the device that creates and emits electrons rather than anything else. Think about it this way, if all electrons that were emited were 'exactly similar' and exactly similar in position and momentum along its wavelength, then wouldn't it be reasonable to assume that they would all take the same path given no extra dynamic varibles to source? In a vacuum for example, the environmental influences- if any- are fairly constant so the paths taken should be identical if identical (in all aspects) electrons are emited. But that's not the case is it? The device that emits electrons will emit unlike electrons therefore the paths taken by them are different and effectively random, therefore an definitive aspect of the HUP becomes realized and observed.
(The above assuming a non random operation of an electron in motion - eg. a predictable period and frequency according to given energy.)
(Also what pattern would you get if they all took the same path? A dot, that's it, no verticle or horizontal displacement, just a dot.)
 
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  • #5
your friend the professor he isn't a professor in Quantum Mechnics right ? One thing that you can be absolutley sure about is that there are such things as entanglement which make it possible to teleport qm states. Now I don't think entanglement or teleportation is possible in the classical world ?
 
  • #6
tdunc said:
HUP is a technological limitation. True or False?

This is false, and you have a misunderstanding of what HUP is based on the rest of your posting.

The HUP is NOT the limitation of measuring a quantity. This is the biggest misunderstanding of the HUP. The accuracy of measuring a position and momentum of a particle depends entirely on the resolution of my instruments. The uncertainty in such a measurement is NOT the HUP. This is something people need to clearly understand. I can measure the position of an object, and then measure as accurately as my instrument allows, the momentum of that object. In none of these two measurements are they limited by the HUP.

What the HUP actually says is that if you prepare an identical system, and measure the identical position of the object, your ability to predict what momentum it will acquire will get worse as you knowledge of the position becomes more accurate. Again, read my essay on the single slit experiment (which, by the way, is NOT due directly to the light source but rather the geometry of the slit). If your certainty of the position get better, your prediction on what value the momentum of that object will be will become worse. So this has nothing to do with exact measurement of position and momentum, but rather the ability to predict what these values will be given the IDENTICAL situation.

What this means is that if you do this repeatedly, there will be a statistical spread of both the position and the momentum. THIS is what is reflected in the HUP, and NOT the measurement of a SINGLE position and momentum.

This is very different than the classical description, in which if you have an identical system, knowing where it is will always give you the same momentum. The statistical spread is only a reflection of uncertainty in measurement and other random errors that one gets in a typical experiment. They certainly do not become worse as one parameter becomes better.

Zz.
 
  • #7
"The HUP is NOT the limitation of measuring a quantity"

I absolutely did not mean to imply that...

What your describing is the UP Method and (for the most part) it is how I also understand it, there is no confusion. What I am describing is the UP of Interpretation within the context of the Copenhagen Intepretation and it's underling relation to the uncontrol of randomness- a technological limitation. The HUP was never defined or stated with regards to any specific experiment or measurement technique so I can, if I want, use the underling principle however I wish and according to a specific experiment, such as the 2-slit, Feyman himself did this.

"Within the widely but not universally accepted Copenhagen interpretation quantum mechanics, the uncertainty principle is taken to mean that on an elementary level, the physical universe does not exist in a deterministic form—but rather as a collection of probabilities, or potentials. For example, the pattern (probability distribution) produced by millions of photons passing through a diffraction slit can be calculated using quantum mechanics, but the exact path of each photon cannot be predicted by any known method. The Copenhagen interpretation holds that it cannot be predicted by any method."

< I am saying that it can eventually given technological advances, be predicted, and that the reason that the path is not currently predictable is because none thought of perhaps that it is actually the device that we need to focus on because as it stands, generates effectively random path electrons.

Just my theory of course. Sorry I should have been more clear.

"which, by the way, is NOT due directly to the light source but rather the geometry of the slit"

Which by the way what? What are you talking about? What it sounds like you just said is that the geometry of the 2-slits or the actual 2-slits themselves are somehow the "measurement" the thing that sets off the collapse, because you go on to say not due to the light source - the light source is typically related to the measurement.

I may read it. However I already think I know what it is going to say. Let me guess, the particle(s) wave bounces off the edges and thus deflect the particle giving it a unique path or something to that effect. That is covered briefly as one possible viewpoint in Feyman lectures if I remember. I happen to believe the geometry of the obstruction plays a significant role myself, not just a passive non varible as if the particle just "slips by" unaffected by the geometrical dimentions as I'm sure you agree - in other words perhaps a hole isn't just a hole. In any case, the second path though is what is really important.
 
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  • #8
Well, I read the rest of the Brian Greene's article. It's very textbook. Which is a problem if the textbooks are out of date. And they are. Making it sound like measurements are important is a classic sign of someone who's not been reading anything recent about interpretation.

Also, Greene gives Einstein too much credit for EPR, which is actually believed to have been Podolsky's idea. Greene also seems to think EPR was about locality when it was about realism and the consequences of believing wave function collapse is a physical effect.

Anyhow, for the person who started this thread, decoherence is the subject to read about. It really is about uncertainty of knowledge now for Schrodinger's cat and the Moon. Facts stay facts in the sense most people mean and whether someone observes them or not.

The ambiguity of what happens between one event and another is still around of course, as is the mystery as to why one event actually happens and not another but the former can be tamed and the latter is only to be expected from a probabilistic theory, I guess. :smile:
 
  • #9
tdunc said:
What your describing is the UP Method and (for the most part) it is how I also understand it, there is no confusion. What I am describing is the UP of Interpretation within the context of the Copenhagen Intepretation and it's underling relation to the uncontrol of randomness- a technological limitation. The HUP was never defined or stated with regards to any specific experiment or measurement technique so I can, if I want, use the underling principle however I wish and according to a specific experiment, such as the 2-slit, Feyman himself did this.

no, no, no, I don't know if the uncertainty principle have been taken to any experimental test but things such as hidden variables in QM have been disproved mathematically, and in fact, the statistical nature of QM (Copenhagen) has predicted experimental results much better than any more deterministic interpretation (notably Bohmian mechanics).

I am saying that it can eventually given technological advances, be predicted, and that the reason that the path is not currently predictable is because none thought of perhaps that it is actually the device that we need to focus on because as it stands, generates effectively random path electrons.

the only thing that can predict any microscopic object deterministically is a theory which essentially overthrows standard QM right now and NOT technology. Does an electron gun generates random electrons, then what about a tennis ball shooter? I assume you look at them at the same light. The tennis ball shooter is not random because the tennis ball has well-defined position and we can calculate forces and all using classical mechanics and predict where the ball would end up.

People have tried using the same way to calculate trajectories of micorscopic objects and have failed, esp. before the birth of Quantum theory. Look at it this way, there is nothing really stopping you from confining any wavefunction in a particular space (rigid box), the important thing you have to note is that standard QM says that "everything possible is compulsory", so the electron or whatever small particle takes every possible route and not just 1 like the tennis ball.

Which by the way what? What are you talking about? What it sounds like you just said is that the geometry of the 2-slits or the actual 2-slits themselves are somehow the "measurement" the thing that sets off the collapse, because you go on to say not due to the light source - the light source is typically related to the measurement.

I may read it. However I already think I know what it is going to say. Let me guess, the particle(s) wave bounces off the edges and thus deflect the particle giving it a unique path or something to that effect. That is covered briefly as one possible viewpoint in Feyman lectures if I remember. I happen to believe the geometry of the obstruction plays a significant role myself, not just a passive non varible as if the particle just "slips by" unaffected by the geometrical dimentions as I'm sure you agree - in other words perhaps a hole isn't just a hole. In any case, the second path though is what is really important.

i think that what Zapperz was saying is that the geometry of the 2 slits influences the interference pattern. And now how is the light source related to measurement? And there's no bouncing off the edges thing going on. No, look at every microscopic object not as a tennis ball but as a probability cloud.

Feynman's path integral formulation of QM is the sum of all possible trajectories to give a (somewhat) classical trajectory, but such classical trajectories shown in Feynman diagrams are simply simplifications and what really happens in a quantum system is best described using the schrodinger equation to describe a particle's wavefunction and this method is indeterminate. (am i right on this one ?, hope someone can correct or back me up).
 
  • #10
tdunc said:
"The HUP is NOT the limitation of measuring a quantity"

I absolutely did not mean to imply that...

What your describing is the UP Method and (for the most part) it is how I also understand it, there is no confusion. What I am describing is the UP of Interpretation within the context of the Copenhagen Intepretation and it's underling relation to the uncontrol of randomness- a technological limitation. The HUP was never defined or stated with regards to any specific experiment or measurement technique so I can, if I want, use the underling principle however I wish and according to a specific experiment, such as the 2-slit, Feyman himself did this.

"Within the widely but not universally accepted Copenhagen interpretation quantum mechanics, the uncertainty principle is taken to mean that on an elementary level, the physical universe does not exist in a deterministic form—but rather as a collection of probabilities, or potentials. For example, the pattern (probability distribution) produced by millions of photons passing through a diffraction slit can be calculated using quantum mechanics, but the exact path of each photon cannot be predicted by any known method. The Copenhagen interpretation holds that it cannot be predicted by any method."

< I am saying that it can eventually given technological advances, be predicted, and that the reason that the path is not currently predictable is because none thought of perhaps that it is actually the device that we need to focus on because as it stands, generates effectively random path electrons.

Just my theory of course. Sorry I should have been more clear.

But you should also read Feyman's own path integral method and realize that the double slit interfence pattern has nothing to do with photons, but with the superposition of PATHS! This means that if you have ANY object, and you could design an experiment in which the path the object going through cannot be detected, you WILL get the identical interference pattern. And we do (example: supercurrent in SQUIDs). So it is puzzling that you are saying that we CAN have a "technological advances" to know the exact path and still maintain the same effect. That's like removing "indistinguishibility" in "indistinguishable statistics" for fermions and bosons. You will get a completely different set of statistics and the original phenomena that it has already described will be gone! If you know the path, there will no longer be a superposition of paths, and what are you left with to be able to get back the interference phenomena?

"which, by the way, is NOT due directly to the light source but rather the geometry of the slit"

Which by the way what? What are you talking about? What it sounds like you just said is that the geometry of the 2-slits or the actual 2-slits themselves are somehow the "measurement" the thing that sets off the collapse, because you go on to say not due to the light source - the light source is typically related to the measurement.

In the earlier posting, you said:

I wanted to comment on diffraction patterns from a slit also. It is my belief that this pattern (multiple bands/patterns actually) comes about due to the device that creates and emits electrons rather than anything else. Think about it this way, if all electrons that were emited were 'exactly similar' and exactly similar in position and momentum along its wavelength, then wouldn't it be reasonable to assume that they would all take the same path given no extra dynamic varibles to source? In a vacuum for example, the environmental influences- if any- are fairly constant so the paths taken should be identical if identical (in all aspects) electrons are emited. But that's not the case is it? The device that emits electrons will emit unlike electrons therefore the paths taken by them are different and effectively random, therefore an definitive aspect of the HUP becomes realized and observed.

Thus, you are attributing the diffraction pattern to the SOURCE. This is false. I can change the shape of the slit and change the diffraction pattern. In fact, the diffraction pattern is actually the fourier transform of the geometry of the slit! All the source affects (if it's monochromatic) is the location of the interference pattern, i.e. the spacing between the patterns, but NOT the nature of the pattern.

I may read it. However I already think I know what it is going to say. Let me guess, the particle(s) wave bounces off the edges and thus deflect the particle giving it a unique path or something to that effect. That is covered briefly as one possible viewpoint in Feyman lectures if I remember. I happen to believe the geometry of the obstruction plays a significant role myself, not just a passive non varible as if the particle just "slips by" unaffected by the geometrical dimentions as I'm sure you agree - in other words perhaps a hole isn't just a hole. In any case, the second path though is what is really important.

And I'm sure that if you have already read my entry, you would have discovered that your guess was wrong. The single slit in a diffraction experiment is equivalent to a position measurement, while the diffraction pattern on a screen or detector is the momentum measuring device. I make no mention of a wave "bouncing off the edges" etc. because such a scenario cannot explain why the diffraction pattern gets larger as the slit is made smaller.

Zz.
 
  • #11
ZapperZ said:
The schrodinger cat-type effect (i.e. the illustration of superposition where orthorgonal states exist simultaneously) HAS experimental verifications (read H2 molecule, Stony Brook/Delft SQUIDs experiments, etc.) And Heisenberg uncertainty principle (HUP) is also an observational fact (example: diffraction from a single slit - I have covered this at length in one of my journal entry if you wish to read it. Furthermore, the de Boer effect especially in noble gasses would be unexplainable without this principle).

Can we actually construct a measurement tool which can measure a state which is in a superposition of some orthogonal states?
 
  • #12
QMrocks said:
Can we actually construct a measurement tool which can measure a state which is in a superposition of some orthogonal states?

Yes, you can. The Schrodinger Cat-type experiments conducted by Delft/Stony Brook measured the energy gap, or the energy observable. This is a non-commuting observable to the position observable. Thus, the act of measurement does not destroy the position superposition and you can get the effects of such superposition.

Both experiments (and Tony Leggett, who first proposed such experiment) claim to have the supercurrents flowing in opposite directions SIMULTANEOUSLY. So you have a superposition of current directions. This is the only scenario (at least so far) to explain the phenomenon. I have listed all the relevant references in one of my latest Journal entries if you wish to take a look at them.

Zz.
 
  • #13
ZapperZ said:
Yes, you can. The Schrodinger Cat-type experiments conducted by Delft/Stony Brook measured the energy gap, or the energy observable. This is a non-commuting observable to the position observable. Thus, the act of measurement does not destroy the position superposition and you can get the effects of such superposition.

Both experiments (and Tony Leggett, who first proposed such experiment) claim to have the supercurrents flowing in opposite directions SIMULTANEOUSLY. So you have a superposition of current directions. This is the only scenario (at least so far) to explain the phenomenon. I have listed all the relevant references in one of my latest Journal entries if you wish to take a look at them.

Zz.
Just to further clarify.. are you saying that the measurement actually projects the state onto its exact state (which is a superposition of orthogonal states)?

PS: Just checked out your journal. Are you referring to this work:
A.J. Leggett "The Quantum Measurement Problem", Science v.307, p.871 (2005).
 
  • #14
QMrocks said:
Just to further clarify.. are you saying that the measurement actually projects the state onto its exact state (which is a superposition of orthogonal states)?

Er... hum. Let me put it this way. If you measure the angular momentum, you have determined Lz, for example, but Lx and Ly are still maintaining their superposition with each other. This is what I mean.

PS: Just checked out your journal. Are you referring to this work:
A.J. Leggett "The Quantum Measurement Problem", Science v.307, p.871 (2005).

Yes, but read his paper on J. Phys. Condens. Matt. That one has an extremely clear exposition on this whole thing, and includes his analysis of the Delft/Stony Brook experiments (both of which I listed also in the same journal entry).

Zz.
 
  • #15
ZapperZ said:
Er... hum. Let me put it this way. If you measure the angular momentum, you have determined Lz, for example, but Lx and Ly are still maintaining their superposition with each other. This is what I mean.

Yes, but read his paper on J. Phys. Condens. Matt. That one has an extremely clear exposition on this whole thing, and includes his analysis of the Delft/Stony Brook experiments (both of which I listed also in the same journal entry).
Zz.

I see. Thanks for the interesting paper. Will check it out first :smile:
 
  • #16
misogynisticfeminist

"the only thing that can predict any microscopic object deterministically is a theory which essentially overthrows standard QM right now and NOT technology."

Not a theory, just insite into why things are deterministic - specifically with regards to the random path (1 electron fired at a time) observed in the 2-slit experiment, and I stand by that it Is the device that creates the electrons.

"Does an electron gun generates random electrons, then what about a tennis ball shooter? I assume you look at them at the same light."

Ha no. You people tend to assume a lot of things, most notable that I have no idea what I'm talking about.

"The tennis ball shooter is not random because the tennis ball has well-defined position and we can calculate forces and all using classical mechanics and predict where the ball would end up."

Gee really? Isnt that what I kinda said?

"so the electron or whatever small particle takes every possible route and not just 1 like the tennis ball."

every possible route according to what? I know what your saying I've heard it before. Superposition of paths. Thank you for your insite. Superposition of paths is in actuality the wave function displacement, whether this involves 1 particle or more than one- entanglement. It does not travel a path that its wave function does not displace.


"i think that what Zapperz was saying is that the geometry of the 2 slits influences the interference pattern."

I agreed with this.

"And now how is the light source related to measurement?"

This was maybe misunderstood. I am referring to the detection area light source (behind the 2-slits), not the device that creates the electrons.


ZapperZ

"So it is puzzling that you are saying that we CAN have a "technological advances" to know the exact path and still maintain the same effect."

Not maintain the same effect. I asked, what the pattern would be given identical electrons fired, and I said a dot.

"If you know the path, there will no longer be a superposition of paths, and what are you left with to be able to get back the interference phenomena?"

Not true, Like I said, if the device created exactly similar electrons they should all take the same 'superposition of paths'
In that sense, the path is predicable and known. What is left to create the interference? Read above, the pattern is now a dot.

"Thus, you are attributing the diffraction pattern to the SOURCE"

Both you and misogynisticfeminist misinterpreted. Actually I am in a sense but realize the whole picture.

"I can change the shape of the slit and change the diffraction pattern."

Only because a pattern, no matter what it may be, comes about as the result of uncommon electrons being fired - and subsequently interacting with the obstruction so that over time a pattern results DUE to the different paths taken. I can't make this anymore clear.
 
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  • #17
tdunc said:
ZapperZ

"So it is puzzling that you are saying that we CAN have a "technological advances" to know the exact path and still maintain the same effect."

Not maintain the same effect. I asked, what the pattern would be given identical electrons fired, and I said a dot.

"If you know the path, there will no longer be a superposition of paths, and what are you left with to be able to get back the interference phenomena?"

Not true, Like I said, if the device created exactly similar electrons they should all take the same 'superposition of paths'
In that sense, the path is predicable and known. What is left to create the interference? Read above, the pattern is now a dot.

Then you have a lot of explaining to do to account for the interference pattern from the supercurrent in a superconducting interference devices. These are electrons in a SINGLE, DEFINITE, and COHERENT state. Yet, we see no "dot".

Zz.
 
  • #18
link? Are these electrons by chance spatially independent of one another? Fired at the same time? - as in a beam of light. I can tell you right now where you are again failing to see my point.

Your use of the word Coherent (as in coherent light) implies mutiple particles and spatically independent - in phase, an entanglement of sorts.
 
  • #19
tdunc said:
link? Are these electrons by chance spatially independent of one another? Fired at the same time? - as in a beam of light. I can tell you right now where you are again failing to see my point.

Your use of the word Coherent (as in coherent light) implies mutiple particles and spatically independent - in phase, an entanglement of sorts.

I take that back. It appears that you have to start, instead, by reading the whole chapter on superfluids and superconductivity. I am suprised that you think this has anything to do with electrons being "fired".

Zz.
 
  • #20
;) you got me, wasnt paying attention. I am familiar with the subject already. Electrons being fired or electrons traveling through a material, Whatever, point is they are in motion and have a relative path. Completely different subject if you ask me anyway. There are numerous types of interference so I think we should really stick to a common ideal.

Still though I have no idea what the setup your talking about involves, appreciate a link.
 
  • #21
tdunc said:
;) you got me, wasnt paying attention. I am familiar with the subject already. Electrons being fired or electrons traveling through a material, Whatever, point is they are in motion and have a relative path. Completely different subject if you ask me anyway. There are numerous types of interference so I think we should really stick to a common ideal.

Relative path?

And the interference effects in all of them share the identical principle. So what's with the "common ideal" thing?

Still though I have no idea what the setup your talking about involves, appreciate a link.

Supercurrent interference, and especially SQUIDs, are standard subject in a superconductivity text such as Tinkham's.

Zz.
 
  • #22
I want to make it clear the distinction between a 1 electron fired at a time vrs multiple electrons fired at the same time- which are also spatially independent- accumulated interference pattern.

Given a non reduceable structure of the electron, it cannot interfere with itself as a means to explain interference patterns - this may be contrary to popular opinon and exactly opposite the photon. to quote Dirac's famous dictum

"...each photon interacts with only itself. Interference between different photons never occurs."

We know this must be true given the fact that light 'reflects' off all surfaces in all directions, its impossible to say that given the shear amount of photons in any luminous environment that they would not interfere with each other, effectively altering each others paths. If interference and collision between photons were allowable then the world we see would be a big blur. Fact. The very nature of the photon forbids it, it has no mass nor charge, therefore a collision cannot take place. Photons can only be guided by such things as an indirect effect of gravity. Photons actually do not reflect (suggesting a collision) off a surface, they are absorbed and re-emited - this explains how new information about what it 'reflected' off of gets transmited. < information that would be impossible to explain otherwise according to a direct physical reflection. Now let me also make a clarification, interference and collision are conceptually and interpretivealy two different things. Light rays can certainly interfere with themselves in one sense of interpretation, but in an alternate sense more akin to a physical disturbance (altering its path) it cannot.

His statement also tells us why the pattern produced by photons is different than electrons, it is not just because of different energy levels. Photons are a reduceable structure, they are "packets of light" and will split at a single or 2-slit obstruction and take both paths given the wavefunction displacement is >= the area containing the 2 paths. A beam splitter is a good example of this, a single photon undergoing parametric down conversion will split and become known as an entangled pair of photons each of them having half the energy of the total system.

An electron on the other hand will not split, it will take either or paths but not both. Same thing with protons and neutrons. Dont ask me what happens when an electron hits the obstruction, because I don't know; I do with 'photons', they split at and according to the geometry of the obstruction with relation to their current position along their wavelength. Electrons can interfere with other electrons, they have a mass and a charge. They can collide as a condition of having mass or they can repeal and attract according to charge.

Even so, if the electron did interfere with itself my statement regarding the pattern generated over time as a condition of random paths holds theoretically true to the position and momentum along their wavelength from which they originated. What it not true, is that the electron has a random operation, if that were the case then we could attribute the random path taken to that. But since that is not the case, we need to explain why the apparent random path. Surely none would suggest that the random path is due to a random operation of the electron? No of course not. So explain to me in other words, why the random path taken given a predictable operation of the electron. A predictable operation will enduce a predictable path - if identical in all aspects electrons are created the path will be identical, no interference pattern; even if they interfere with themselves along the way, if they all do interfere with themselves along the way that as well will be predictable and still the identical path is maintained. The only argument you could ever make is random self interference which will subsequently enduce a random path - then you would need to explain the logic and mechanics of random interference among itself. < Conceptually possible yet entirely difficult and chaotic. OR
possibly there are dynamic "unknown" forces (dont want to say hidden varibles) associated with the environment in which the electron travels through causing a random path. < That I will buy but an example is necessary. Explain random path.

And by relative path I meant several things, one of which includes the path of electron A being relative to a subsequent electron B and so forth, and in the case of multiple electrons being present at the same time they have an additional temporal and spatial relative path to each other - such as coherency phase and polarization. Not sure what point I want to make here, your wearing me out ;)

What I'm saying is something new (right or wrong) so I understand questions. But I really think I have said what I wanted to and then some. If I say anymore, mine as well move it to personal theory forum where I can explain it in full.
 
  • #23
mikecorn said:
... Now I wonder why Brian Green and other certified geniuses apparently buy the first interpretation.

The answer is that there is experimental evidence to support that interpretation. While entirely reasonable, as ZapperZ points out, the "lack of knowledge" concept actually has been experimentally falsified with experiments performed by Alain Aspect and others. Such experiments are called EPR tests or Bell tests. The idea that the particles have definite attributes when they are not being observed is unsupported by evidence.

Google on the following and you can get as much additional information as you like:

EPR Bell Aspect
 
  • #24
tdunc said:
Given a non reduceable structure of the electron, it cannot interfere with itself as a means to explain interference patterns - this may be contrary to popular opinon and exactly opposite the photon.

I think ZapperZ has previously indicated that any quantum particle can be made to interfere with itself, including both photons and electrons specifically. Not sure why you are differientiating between these...
 
  • #25
specifically "as a means to explain interference patterns"

however I go on to provide a possible workaround to this given

"random self interference"

And to be honest I find it amusing that out of everything I said in all my posts, That was all you had to say. And I am not sure what to think about Zappers silence. The question remains, "explain random path -given a predictable operation of the electron"

I already gave my answer, I want to hear someone else's. After all this phenmenon is the crux of the misinterpretation behind what the original post is about imo. Doesnt matter who said it Brian Green or anyone else, we know what he's talking about and heard it before. 'Quantum randomness' and 'Quantum uncertanty' 'Probabilities' "A myrid of possibilities converging to a single outcome"

And I would go ahead and change my statement from

The HUP is a technological limitation

to

Quantum randomness is a technological limitation

And I've been thinking about the Copenhagen Interpretation and the Many worlds interpretation, I don't really think they have an appropiate relation to the HUP after all. The HUP is a method, and specific experiment outside the scope quite frankly of what those two discuss.
 
Last edited:
  • #26
tdunc said:
And to be honest I find it amusing that out of everything I said in all my posts, That was all you had to say. And I am not sure what to think about Zappers silence. The question remains, "explain random path -given a predictable operation of the electron"

Are you flattering yourself? (Most of your previous posts fall into a category I call "rambling". I tried to address the part that makes sense.)

If you send a particle through a suitable double slit by itself, and then another a while later, and then another... an interference pattern will form. This result can be deduced from the HUP (I saw this in a reference ZapperZ has).

I hope this is clear.
 
  • #27
Your rediculous.
 
  • #28
Doc and Dunc, Hold it down guys. This forum doesn't exist for posters to play insult games.
 

What is quantum mechanics?

Quantum mechanics, also known as quantum physics, is a branch of physics that studies the behavior of matter and energy at the atomic and subatomic level. It describes the fundamental principles that govern the behavior of particles such as electrons, protons, and photons.

How does quantum mechanics differ from classical mechanics?

Classical mechanics describes the behavior of macroscopic objects, while quantum mechanics describes the behavior of particles at the microscopic level. Unlike classical mechanics, quantum mechanics takes into account the principles of uncertainty and superposition, which have no counterpart in classical physics.

What is wave-particle duality?

Wave-particle duality is a fundamental concept in quantum mechanics that states that particles can exhibit both wave-like and particle-like behavior. This means that particles can exist in multiple states or locations simultaneously, known as superposition, and can also behave as waves, exhibiting characteristics such as interference and diffraction.

What is the role of probability in quantum mechanics?

In quantum mechanics, particles do not have definite positions or velocities. Instead, their properties are described by a probability wave function, which determines the likelihood of finding a particle in a particular state or location. This probabilistic nature of quantum mechanics is essential in understanding the behavior of particles at the subatomic level.

How can quantum mechanics be applied in real-world situations?

Quantum mechanics has many practical applications, including the development of technologies such as transistors, lasers, and MRI machines. It also plays a crucial role in fields such as cryptography, quantum computing, and nanotechnology. Understanding quantum mechanics is essential for advancing our understanding of the physical world and developing new technologies.

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