Is it possible to violate conservation of energy in quantum?

In summary, the conversation centers around the concepts of conservation of energy and the uncertainty principle in quantum mechanics. The participants have been discussing the possibility of violating energy conservation for brief periods of time and have looked into various interpretations of the energy-time uncertainty relations. However, they have not been able to come to a conclusion and are seeking feedback on their ideas. Some sources, such as the link provided, discuss the concept of virtual particles and their relationship to energy conservation. There is also a discussion on the concept of a superposition of energy states and how it relates to energy measurement and the experimental apparatus.
  • #1
jfy4
649
3
Me and my roommate have being talking about the conservation of energy and the uncertainty principle and we are wondering if its possible to violate conservation of energy for brief periods of time or not. We have seen various interpretations of the energy-time uncertainty relations but cannot come to a conclusion.

Can we get some feed back here on this idea.

Thanks
 
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  • #2
I'm no expert, but here is a link:
http://www.phys.ncku.edu.tw/mirrors/physicsfaq/Quantum/virtual_particles.html
(see conservation of energy)

I think the energy-time uncertainty itself for normal particles does not violate energy conservation. The uncertainty relation is really only a different way to think about energy and time. You have to get into that QM maths to see the difference to classical concepts. Basically there isn't such a thing like a point particle with a velocity anymore.
 
  • #3
The Hamiltonian is an operator exactly conserved in time. Thus, if the initial state is an eigenstate of the Hamiltonian with the eigenvalue E, then, as far as evolution is governed by the Hamiltonian, the state at any other time is a Hamiltonian eigenstate with the same eigenvalue E.

However, the state at a given time can be expanded in any basis, including a basis which consists of states which are not Hamiltonian eigenstates. By doing an appropriate measurement at that time, the state may "collapse" to one of these states, which may cause apparent violation of energy conservation. However, the "collapse" is not a unitary evolution governed by the Hamiltonian. When the "collapse" is replaced by a more appropriate description of measurement in which a true collapse never occurs, it turns out that the total energy (i.e. the sum of energies of the measured system, measuring apparatus, and all the environment) is conserved again.
 
  • #4
Demystifier said:
However, the state at a given time can be expanded in any basis, including a basis which consists of states which are not Hamiltonian eigenstates. By doing an appropriate measurement at that time, the state may "collapse" to one of these states, which may cause apparent violation of energy conservation.
But then the state wasn't even a definite energy before?
 
  • #5
jfy4 said:
Me and my roommate have being talking about the conservation of energy and the uncertainty principle and we are wondering if its possible to violate conservation of energy for brief periods of time or not. We have seen various interpretations of the energy-time uncertainty relations but cannot come to a conclusion.

Can we get some feed back here on this idea.

Thanks

Please read msg. #5 in our https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=104715" in the General Physics forum.

Zz.
 
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  • #7
Gerenuk said:
But then the state wasn't even a definite energy before?
Yes it was.
 
  • #8
Demystifier said:
Yes it was.
Which one of the many energies is the energy of a system which is a superposition?
 
  • #9
ZapperZ said:
Please read msg. #5 in our https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=104715" in the General Physics forum.

Zz.

Thank you for that response. It helped.

I have been looking at Wikipedia and some other sources and we are still trying to figure this out :) and get settled on an interpretation. However I think there may be a conflict with your statement in your response and Wikipedia. What you want to do about it is up to you. I am not sure if its an issue.

From you:
And where does the time-energy uncertainty relationship come in ?
It tells you esentially that *in order to perform an energy measurement with precision dE*, you will need to measure (to have your measurement apparatus interact with) the system for a time of at least dt.

From Wiki:
One false formulation of the energy-time uncertainty principle says that measuring the energy of a quantum system to an accuracy ΔE requires a time interval Δt > h / ΔE. This formulation is similar to the one alluded to in Landau's joke, and was explicitly invalidated by Y. Aharonov and D. Bohm in 1961. The time Δt in the uncertainty relation is the time during which the system exists unperturbed, not the time during which the experimental equipment is turned on.

Thank you for your response!
 
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  • #10
Gerenuk said:
Which one of the many energies is the energy of a system which is a superposition?


I want to to know this too.
 
  • #11
The issue of conservation of momentum/energy in quantum mechanics is best illustrated using the familiar single-slit setup. When an electron of definite momentum is directed at the plate with a single slit, it becomes a superposition of momentum states when it passes through the slit. With regard to conservation laws, this representes the uncontrollable exchange of momentum between the plate and the electron, since the plate is assumed to have effectively infinite mass, i.e. it is treated as a classical body. Because of the fact that the plate is treated as part of the experimental apparatus, i.e. the objects that define the possibility of space-time coordination of the quantum phenomenon under investigation, a control of energy-momentum exchange with it is excluded, which also happens to be the reason why in any given experimental set-up, the quantum formalism allows only probabilistic predictions. Here, one must keep in mind that the definition of energy-momentum is not the classical one, but the one connected with the relations (E, P) = (hf,hσ).
 
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  • #12
Gerenuk said:
Which one of the many energies is the energy of a system which is a superposition?
You mean before the measurement of energy? Standard quantum theory does not offer an answer to this question. Such a question can only be answered within hidden variable interpretations of QM, such as the Bohmian interpretation.
 
  • #13
Gerenuk said:
Which one of the many energies is the energy of a system which is a superposition?

Demystifier said:
You mean before the measurement of energy? Standard quantum theory does not offer an answer to this question.

Standard quantum theory does of course answer this question, in the sense that it does indicate how one must think about this question. As was shown by Bohr, the energy-momentum description and the space-time description are complementary. One cannot mix up these concepts without restriction and without regard to the experimental conditions. As I've described in my previous post, the electron which passes through the slit is in a superposition of momentum states. Since inititially it had a definite momentum, how must we think about its subsequent evolution into a superposition, with regard to conservation laws? The answer is that the evolution of a momentum state into a superposition of momentum states represents the possibility of exchange of momentum with the apparatus defining the experimental conditions. Now Gerenuk's question is, "what is the actual momentum of the particle after it passes the slit?". Here it is extremely important to realize that we are posing a question about the 'interior' of an inherently indivisible quantum process, and any attempt of trying to assign a definite momentum to the electron before it reaches the photographic plate will require a change in the experimental conditions, and in that case we are no longer studying the same process, since any change in the experimental conditions will introduce new possibilities of interaction between the electron and the apparatus, and the description of the experiment will be different, in the sense of complementarity. The fact that customary classical concepts, which in classical mechanics could always be used at the same time, can be given unambiguous meaning only in mutually exclusive experimental arrangements is exactly what allows the quantum mechanical framework to describe regularities that the classical framework cannot.
 
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  • #14
dx said:
Standard quantum theory does of course answer this question, in the sense that it does indicate how one must think about this question. As was shown by Bohr, the energy-momentum description and the space-time description are complementary. One cannot mix up these concepts without restriction and without regard to the experimental conditions. As I've described in my previous post, the electron which passes through the slit is in a superposition of momentum states. Since inititially it had a definite momentum, how must we think about its subsequent evolution into a superposition, with regard to conservation laws? The answer is that the evolution of a momentum state into a superposition of momentum states represents the possibility of exchange of momentum with the apparatus defining the experimental conditions. Now Gerenuk's question is, "what is the actual momentum of the particle after it passes the slit?". Here it is extremely important to realize that we are posing a question about the 'interior' of an inherently indivisible quantum process, and any attempt of trying to assign a definite momentum to the electron before it reaches the photographic plate will require a change in the experimental conditions, and in that case we are no longer studying the same process, since any change in the experimental conditions will introduce new possibilities of interaction between the electron and the apparatus, and the description of the experiment will be different, in the sense of complementarity.

...To which the dBB adherent such as Demystifier say: "during this 'indivisible quantum process' do you believe the particle is actually a haze of probability? If so, what does that imply about your view of how QM describes the world?"

I'm not a Bohmian, but even then I don't find your argument terribly convincing because I believe that the "indivisible quantum process" SHOULD be explicable with a complete "theory of eveything". Where a Bohmian argues for their Interpretation, and I won't put words into your mouth as to what you would do, I think recognizing that while QM formalism is incredibly useful it comes with more and more baggage. No interpretation based on such a blatantly incomplete theory with artifacts such as renormalization, can really be valid, given the foundations.
 

1. What is conservation of energy in quantum mechanics?

Conservation of energy in quantum mechanics is a fundamental principle that states that the total energy of a closed system remains constant over time. This means that energy cannot be created or destroyed, but it can be transformed from one form to another.

2. How does quantum mechanics relate to conservation of energy?

In quantum mechanics, energy is quantized, meaning it can only exist in discrete amounts called quanta. However, the total energy of a system must still remain constant, even as energy is exchanged between different quanta.

3. Can conservation of energy be violated in quantum mechanics?

No, conservation of energy is a fundamental law of physics and cannot be violated in any system, including quantum systems. Any apparent violations of this law can be explained by other factors, such as energy being transferred to or from the system without being directly observed.

4. Are there any exceptions to conservation of energy in quantum mechanics?

There are no known exceptions to conservation of energy in quantum mechanics. However, there are some phenomena, such as quantum tunneling, that may seem to violate this law. However, these can be explained by the uncertainty principle, which allows for temporary and small energy fluctuations within a system.

5. How is energy conserved in quantum mechanics?

In quantum mechanics, energy is conserved through various processes, such as energy being transferred between different subatomic particles, particles and antiparticles annihilating each other and releasing energy, or energy being exchanged through electromagnetic fields. Overall, the total energy of a system remains constant, even as it undergoes various transformations.

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