Probability or Impossibility in QM?

In summary, the conversation discusses the concept of an electron's position and how quantum mechanics provides a probability for its location, even if it seems impossible according to other physical laws. The wavefunction is considered predictive, not retrodictive, and gives a probability for where the electron is likely to be found in the future. However, once the position is measured, the previous wavefunction should not be used to determine where the electron was previously. The question remains about how quantum mechanics can give a non-zero probability for the electron to be on the moon at a time when it would be impossible for light to reach there.
  • #1
dkgolfer16
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Let us say we find the position of an electron at time t to be here on earth. An instant before this, the electron must have been here on Earth as well since nothing can travel faster then 670 million miles per hour. In other words the electron does have a speed limit, so 1 x 10^-15 seconds prior to locating the electron on earth, there would be no other place that the electron could have existed. The problem is that this instant before we discovered its position, quantum mechanic equations provide a probability that the same electron was on the dark side of the moon. Why does Quantum Mechanics provide us with a probability that seems to be an impossibility?
 
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  • #2
dkgolfer16 said:
Let us say we find the position of an electron at time t to be here on earth. An instant before this, the electron must have been here on Earth as well since nothing can travel faster then 670 million miles per hour. In other words the electron does have a speed limit, so 1 x 10^-15 seconds prior to locating the electron on earth, there would be no other place that the electron could have existed. The problem is that this instant before we discovered its position, quantum mechanic equations provide a probability that the same electron was on the dark side of the moon. Why does Quantum Mechanics provide us with a probability that seems to be an impossibility?

The wavefunction that gives the location of the election may allow it to be anywhere, but the probability for it to be in most places (like the dark side of the moon) is vanishingly small. In your terms, that's "impossibility."

By the way, do you mean "dark side" or "far side?" I only ask because Mark Twain made that mistake too.
 
  • #3
QM wrong ?

Thank you for reiterating my point countryboy. QM seems to provide a probability, and I understand how small it is, that the electron would be found on the 'dark side' (literary expression) of the moon, yet general physics tells us this is impossible. Since it is impossible, yet QM does give a probability, doesn't this mean that one of the latter is incorrect?
 
  • #4
dkgolfer16 said:
Thank you for reiterating my point countryboy. QM seems to provide a probability, and I understand how small it is, that the electron would be found on the 'dark side' (literary expression) of the moon, yet general physics tells us this is impossible. Since it is impossible, yet QM does give a probability, doesn't this mean that one of the latter is incorrect?

I guess the expression, literarly, would be "No."

The "impossible" of classical physics is the limit of "improbable" in quantum mechanics. If QM were that easy, anyone could do it.
 
  • #5
I'm no expert on the subject, but to me it seems like you're arguing something like this:

You solve the Schroedinger equation and find a solution for some particle which gives a non-zero probability to find this particle over some large region of space. You then perform a measurement at time [itex]t_0[/itex] and find the particle to be located and some position [itex]x_0[/itex]. You're then asking why the Schroedinger equation gives a non zero probability to find the particle at [itex]t_0 - t^{\prime}[/itex] at the coordinate [itex]x^{\prime} > x_0 + ct^{\prime}[/itex], which would apparently contradict other physical laws.

The point is that if you had solved the Schroedinger equation with the condition [itex]\Psi(x,t=t_0)=\delta(x-x_0)[/itex] then you would not have found the original solution which tells you that the wavefunction is extended over some large region of space. I'm not sure if this make physical sense (because measurement is time irreversible, so solving the above for [itex]t < t_0[/itex] is probably unphysical somehow), but from a mathematical viewpoint it seems reasonable.

Edit: The boundary condition should be for the probabiliy density not the wavefunction
 
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  • #6
So if we agree, in the physical sense, that it would be impossible to find an electron at time t =1.00000000000000000000000001 seconds on the moon if at t = 1.000000000000000000000000 seconds it was located on earth, then why are QM equations considered valid if they say we do in fact have some probability that the electron will be found on the moon at t = 1.000000000000000000001 seconds? Someone please provide a concrete answer to this dilemma. I have yet to see one. Thank you.
 
  • #7
dkgolfer16 said:
The problem is that this instant before we discovered its position, quantum mechanic equations provide a probability that the same electron was on the dark side of the moon.

But if we had measured the position of the particle at that earlier time and observed it to be on the dark/far side of the moon, that would have collapsed the wave function so that (assuming we're using a relativistic formulation of QM) it would give a zero probability of being here on Earth.

I think the wave function should be regarded as predictive, not retrodictive. It tells you where you are likely to find the particle now or in the future (assuming nothing collapses the wave function in the meantime), but once you have measured the particle's position, the previous wave function should not be interpreted as giving you information about where it actually was previously.
 
  • #8
Thanks jtbell I understand what you mean about the wavefunction only being predictive. For example though, if we find that an electron is on Earth at time t = 0, then the function will give some probability that the same electron will be at the moon at time t = 0.0000000000001 sec even though light could not reach the moon at that time. Any ideas?
 
  • #9
dkgolfer16 said:
if we find that an electron is on Earth at time t = 0, then the function will give some probability that the same electron will be at the moon at time t = 0.0000000000001 sec even though light could not reach the moon at that time.

Does relativistic QM really make that prediction (or just the non-relativistic approximation)?

In general, does it bother you if things that you used to consider impossible (such as having an octopus quantum tunnel onto your desk) are actually just improbable (and so vanishingly unlikely as that you would expect them never to occur during the length of the universe)?
 
  • #10
Hi Frogman,
QM REALLY makes such a prediction and such a prediction is what Albert Einstien could not come to grips with. And as for things that bother me, such as a particle traveling faster then the speed of light, Yes things like this do bother me and I, along with any other knowledgeable person, know things like this aren't just improbable, they are impossible.

Thanks Frogman.
 
  • #11
Just to clarify, by "non-relativistic approximation" I meant the Schrödinger equation. Can you give a reference supporting your assertion that there is an accepted relativistic QM prediction of non-zero probability for particles to be measured as moving faster than light-speed?
 
  • #12
cesiumfrog said:
Just to clarify, by "non-relativistic approximation" I meant the Schrödinger equation. Can you give a reference supporting your assertion that there is an accepted relativistic QM prediction of non-zero probability for particles to be measured as moving faster than light-speed?

Yes, this is a well-known paradox in relativistic quantum mechanics. I think it was first clearly formulated and popularized by Hegerfeldt. See, for example

G. C. Hegerfeldt, "Instantaneous spreading and Einstein causality in quantum theory", Ann. Phys. (Leipzig), 7 (1998) 716; http://www.arxiv.org/quant-ph/9809030

There are lots of discussions of this effect in the literature. However I haven't found one that would satisfy me. Here I would like to suggest an explanation wihich, I think, is acceptable.

It is true that if a particle is prepared in a localized state at time t=0, then at any later time t it can be found with non-zero probability outside the sphere with radius ct. So, if a particle is prepared now on the Earth it can be found (with some probability) 10^-15 seconds later on the Moon.

It is also true that if such a behavior was found with classical (not quantum) particles, it would mean a serious violation of causality. This is because one could find a moving reference frame in which the cause (preparation of the particle on the Earth) and the effect (detection of the particle on the Moon) would change their time order: the detection would appear earlier that the preparation. This is certainly not acceptable.

However, here we are dealing with a quantum particle governed by probabilistic laws, so the causality paradox is not so obvious. Indeed, for the particle localized from the point of view of observer O its wavefunction is no longer localized from the point of view of the moving observer O'.

F. Strocchi, "Relativistic quantum mechanics and field theory", Found. Phys., 34, (2004) 501; http://www.arxiv.org/hep-th/0401143

So, observer O' will see that even at t=0 the particle can be everywhere (with some probability), even on the Moon. So, this observer cannot definitely say that the particle travels from the point of its detection (on the Moon) to the point of its preparation (on the Earth). So, there is no obvious violation of causality.

This means that in relativistic quantum mechanics it is possible to have a superluminal propagation (with almost negligible probability), however this fact does not violate the law of causality, so it is not a reason for concern.

Eugene.
 
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  • #13
Thanks for the input Eugene. I'll look into your idea further and try to convince myself that this paradox in QM is explainable because to me it seems like we must answer this before taking QM any further.
 
  • #14
meopemuk said:
relativistic quantum mechanics it is possible to have a superluminal propagation (with almost negligible probability), however this fact does not violate the law of causality

Thanks Eugene, although this raises another question for me:

Say my lab on the moon has big containers of many many confined particles. (Feels awkward to use photons, but electrons would suffice.) Let the particles from each container be labelled in some manner (say by spin up vs down, although it would also suffice if one container just held antielectrons to contrast with the electrons). Say also that my partner is near Mars (and moving at rest with respect to me) with a very sensitive particle detector.

At some event, I release one of the containers as a signal. Since that labelled subset of particles is now free, their wave-function will now extend "instantly" to my partner near mars. Because I released so very many particles at once, she will be able to detect the suddenly increased particle intensity (above the background) before a conventional light signal would have had time to reach her. Therefore she knows that the event has already occurred, and by her measuring the labels on the particles (even just checking whether she detected electrons or anti-electrons, and igniting an appropriately coloured flare in response), I will have communicated one classical "bit" of information to her, faster than light.

Where above am I wrong? One thing that I can easily show is how this above kind of FTL communication (which in the context of SR is always "backward in time" for some observers) is sufficient to violate causality (we can set up a "paradox" whereby my accomplice wins their local lotto competition).
 
  • #15
cesiumfrog said:
Because I released so very many particles at once, she will be able to detect the suddenly increased particle intensity (above the background) before a conventional light signal would have had time to reach her.

This is where your (otherwise fine) example goes wrong. Your partner on Mars is moving. So, according to boost transformations of wavefunctions she will never perceive your particles as localized. According to her, the probability of finding your particles in her (Mars) neighborhood will be non-zero at all times. So, there will be no sudden increase in the "particle intensity" and no clearly distinguishable superluminal signal.

Eugene.

ADDED: I anticipate your objection: "how come that a particle in a sealed container has a chance to be on Mars even for the moving observer?" I must stress that I was talking only about free particles which were prepared in a localized (delta function) state by the observer at rest. Particles in a container add another level of complication (interactions), and Hegerfeldt's theorem has not been proven for them.
 
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  • #16
meopemuk said:
Your partner on Mars is moving.
No. Recall I specifically chose that she is at rest with respect to me (which is why I only described her position as *near* Mars).

I can get rid of the intuitive parts, and make it theoretically cleaner: Let us be always non-accelerating and at rest to one another, in Minkowski space-time, and well separated in space. No boost transformation, just a space-like translation. Rather than a "container", let there just be a large number of ideal non-interacting particles initially prepared in an infinite delta potential well (which I can switch off at any time, after which they are all free particles, and I can quickly collapse their wavefunctions myself if that makes you more confortable..).
 
  • #17
dkgolfer16 said:
... it seems like we must answer this before taking QM any further.

Hmmm... It may be a little late to try to disprove QM.
 
  • #18
meopemuk said:
Your partner on Mars is moving.

cesiumfrog said:
No. Recall I specifically chose that she is at rest with respect to me (which is why I only described her position as *near* Mars).

I am sorry, then I misunderstood your words "and moving at rest with respect to me."

If your partner is not moving, then she will be able to detect the particles released by you shortly after their release. Yes, there will be superluminal propagation. Where is the promised controversy?

Eugene.
 
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  • #19
meopemuk said:
If your partner is not moving, then she will be able to detect the particles released by you shortly after their release. Yes, there will be superluminal propagation. Where is the promised controversy?

Do you agree that there will be superluminal communication of classical information? (If not, why not? The controversy is because causality paradoxes follow trivially from FTL communication.)
 
  • #20
cesiumfrog said:
Do you agree that there will be superluminal communication of classical information? (If not, why not? The controversy is because causality paradoxes follow trivially from FTL communication.)

I agree that observer on Mars will measure a sudden increase in particle density almost simultaneously with your opening the container. Yes, this can be regarded as FTL transmission of information. Where is the (trivial, as you say) causality paradox?

Eugene.

ADDED: I think I am beginning to understand your point. But I'll let you formulate it. I need to do more thinking.
 
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  • #21
The crux of it is that Special Relativity says the time-ordering of space-like separated events is subjective.

Say we are at rest in a reference frame S. At event A you accept final entries to the lotto (number guessing) competition. Later, at event B, you run the random number generator and announce the result (the winning lotto number). I immediately broadcast the result, using FTL technology, straight to a FTL receiver at event X. (Say the receiver is also at rest in our frame S, but that the receiver immediately displays the message on a screen that can also be read by observers at event X who have other velocities.) We both agree that in our frame (S), event X is slightly "later in time" than event B, but (strictly, since X is so "far away" in spatial distance) the line connecting events B and X (and also even between A and X) is space-like.

Consequently, for an agent (at event X) moving very quickly away from our direction (but at rest in their own reference frame S2), event X is "earlier in time" than both event B and even event A (although still the separation is space-like, not time-like). This means the agent can use their own FTL communication apparatus to transmit the lotto number result from event X to a second agent (also at rest in frame S2) at "later" event A. It helps to draw the Minkowski diagrams.

As that second agent wizzed past us, back earlier at event A, she handed me a note with a message (received by her FTL from event X) which you remember I transcribed onto the final lotto entry that you accepted. And as we now know, that message turned out to be the winning lotto number. So if QM makes FTL communication possible (but SR still holds), you'll be paying me the million dollar prize now..?
 
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  • #22
cesiumfrog said:
The crux of it is that Special Relativity says the time-ordering of space-like separated events is subjective.

Say we are at rest in a reference frame S. At event A you accept final entries to the lotto (number guessing) competition. Later, at event B, you run the random number generator and announce the result (the winning lotto number). I immediately broadcast the result, using FTL technology, straight to a FTL receiver at event X. (Say the receiver is also at rest in our frame S, but that the receiver immediately displays the message on a screen that can also be read by observers at event X who have other velocities.) We both agree that in our frame (S), event X is slightly "later in time" than event B, but (strictly, since X is so "far away" in spatial distance) the line connecting events B and X (and also even between A and X) is space-like.

Consequently, for an agent (at event X) moving very quickly away from our direction (but at rest in their own reference frame S2), event X is "earlier in time" than both event B and even event A (although still the separation is space-like, not time-like). This means the agent can use their own FTL communication apparatus to transmit the lotto number result from event X to a second agent (also at rest in frame S2) at "later" event A. It helps to draw the Minkowski diagrams.

As that second agent wizzed past us, back earlier at event A, she handed me a note with a message (received by her FTL from event X) which you remember I transcribed onto the final lotto entry that you accepted. And as we now know, that message turned out to be the winning lotto number. So if QM makes FTL communication possible (but SR still holds), you'll be paying me the million dollar prize now..?

Yes, I see your point. My initial hope that the probabilistic nature of quantum particles might save us from this paradox was probably wrong. Small changes of the wave function can be amplified to classical events. And, to be honest, I don't see any resolution of this paradox at the moment. It seems that this paradox is an inevitable consequence of well-established laws of relativity and quantum mechanics.

Can we look at it from another perspective? OK, winning a million bucks in the lotto is an extraordinary event. But does it contradict any law of physics? Can your logic be used to demonstrate a violation of a well-established physical law? Perhaps causality is not such a strict law after all? What if we can influence our past? What's wrong with that?

Eugene.
 
  • #23
GR strongly supports "block universe", which in turn implies self fulfilling futures are fine but time travel paradoxes are not. (The alternative is that "reality" does not exist in the usual unique non-subjective sense.) Yes, you can arrange to exert an influence over your own history, for example you can directly cause your own conception to occur, but you cannot prevent your own conception (i.e., even if you had the ability, you cannot have the will). Probably also makes for interesting thermodynamics.

Mainstream opinion however is that FTL communication is impossible (and I presume disallowed by QFT). This contradicts what I will here call "your representation" of work that you note has been published in what I do not think are high impact journals. I'm guessing the wavefunction does not spread out faster than the speed of light.

It is really trivial to show (as I have) that FTL communication would cause exciting problems, so I find it non-believable that more mainstream physicists would not be working (and releasing high profile publications) in this area of QM if there was any credible suggestion that it might lead to that.
 
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  • #24
cesiumfrog said:
GR strongly supports "block universe", which in turn implies self fulfilling futures are fine but time travel paradoxes are not. (The alternative is that "reality" does not exist in the usual unique non-subjective sense.) Yes, you can arrange to exert an influence over your own history, for example you can directly cause your own conception to occur, but you cannot prevent your own conception (i.e., even if you had the ability, you cannot have the will). Probably also makes for interesting thermodynamics.

Mainstream opinion however is that FTL communication is impossible (and I presume disallowed by QFT). This contradicts what I will here call "your representation" of work that you note has been published in what I do not think are high impact journals. I'm guessing the wavefunction does not spread out faster than the speed of light.

It is really trivial to show (as I have) that FTL communication would cause exciting problems, so I find it non-believable that more mainstream physicists would not be working (and releasing high profile publications) in this area of QM if there was any credible suggestion that it might lead to that.

I don't know. Yesterday I thought I understand how to solve the FTL paradox in relativistic quantum mechanics. Today I am not sure. All explanations of this paradox that I saw in the literature do not look credible to me. I need to think more and make my own decision.

Eugene.
 
  • #25
We see this paradox being "resolved" in Zee and P&S through a careful (if still pretty confusing) translation from a field propagator to a real, measurable "particle". For instance, Zee claims that the leaking of a field outside the lightcone does not imply a "real" particle being detected there. Also, I can't recall if some part of the apparent paradox came from adding over momenta which are far from the mass shell.
 
  • #26
Gokul43201 said:
We see this paradox being "resolved" in Zee and P&S through a careful (if still pretty confusing) translation from a field propagator to a real, measurable "particle". For instance, Zee claims that the leaking of a field outside the lightcone does not imply a "real" particle being detected there. Also, I can't recall if some part of the apparent paradox came from adding over momenta which are far from the mass shell.

Peskin and Schroeder demonstrate that free quantum fields (anti)commute at space-like separations. However, there is no relationship between this fact and the speed of propagation of wavefunctions. In a very long thread
https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=175155
(starting somewhere in the middle of the thread) there is a discussion of the relationship between wavefunctions and quantum fields. I still believe that these are completely unrelated things. In other words, I don't take what's written in P&S as a convincing proof.

I don't have Zee's book, but I doubt that their explanation is fundamenatally different from that in P&S.
 
  • #27
Isn't it well proved in mathematics, that wave equations don't allow propagation with infinite speed? So just apply Klein-Gordon equation (or other variants) to the wave function, and you don't have any propagation outside light cones.
 
  • #28
jostpuur said:
Isn't it well proved in mathematics, that wave equations don't allow propagation with infinite speed? So just apply Klein-Gordon equation (or other variants) to the wave function, and you don't have any propagation outside light cones.

In my opinion, the Klein-Gordon equation is valid for quantum fields, not for particle wavefunctions. There was a long discussion about this in

https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=175155

Eugene.
 

1. What is the difference between probability and impossibility in quantum mechanics?

In quantum mechanics, probability refers to the likelihood of a certain event or outcome occurring. Impossibility, on the other hand, refers to an outcome that cannot occur due to the laws and principles of quantum mechanics. While probability deals with the likelihood of something happening, impossibility deals with the impossibility of something happening.

2. How do scientists determine the probability of an event in quantum mechanics?

The probability of an event in quantum mechanics is determined through mathematical calculations using the principles of quantum mechanics. This involves understanding the state of a system, the physical properties of particles, and the laws that govern their behavior. Scientists also use experimental data and statistical analysis to determine the probability of an event occurring.

3. Can something be both probable and impossible in quantum mechanics?

In quantum mechanics, something cannot be both probable and impossible at the same time. This is known as the principle of complementarity, which states that certain properties of particles cannot be observed simultaneously. Therefore, if something is deemed impossible, it cannot also have a probability of occurring.

4. How does quantum uncertainty affect the concept of probability in quantum mechanics?

Quantum uncertainty, also known as Heisenberg's uncertainty principle, states that the more precisely we know the position of a particle, the less precisely we know its momentum, and vice versa. This uncertainty makes it impossible to know the exact state of a system, leading to the use of probability in quantum mechanics to describe the behavior of particles.

5. Is it possible to have a 100% probability of an event occurring in quantum mechanics?

No, it is not possible to have a 100% probability of an event occurring in quantum mechanics. This is due to the inherent uncertainty and randomness in the behavior of particles at the quantum level. Even if an event has a high probability, there is still a chance it may not occur, and vice versa. Therefore, probability in quantum mechanics is always a range of values rather than a definite outcome.

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