Is dBB reproducing quantum results ?

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In summary, the conversation discusses the differences between quantum mechanics (QM) and de Broglie-Bohm theory (dBB) in predicting the movement of particles. While QM predicts that particles can have traveled some distance at t>0 with given probabilities, dBB suggests that the speed of the particle is given by the guiding equation, which may result in the particle not moving at all. However, this reasoning has been challenged and it has been shown that dBB can still produce identical probabilistic predictions as QM. The conversation also touches on the concept of wave function collapse and how it is explained in dBB.
  • #1
jk22
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If we consider at time t=0 a particle at x=0 we get a gaussian distribution for time t>0 via the Schroedinger equation.
Hence QM predicts that the particle can have traveled some distance at t>0 with given probabilities. see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uncertainty_principle

However in dBB the speed of the particle is given by the guiding equation, namely the derivative of the wavefunction, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/De_Broglie–Bohm_theory
This derivative is 0 forall t at x=0,
hence the dBB-particle does not move at all, and hence dBB cannot reproduce QM results.

What is wrong with this reasoning, since apparently a theorem (which?) proves that if dBB was refuted then QM were refuted too https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=459148
 
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  • #2
jk22 said:
If we consider at time t=0 a particle at x=0 we get a gaussian distribution for time t>0 via the Schroedinger equation.
Hence QM predicts that the particle can have traveled some distance at t>0 with given probabilities. see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uncertainty_principle

However in dBB the speed of the particle is given by the guiding equation, namely the derivative of the wavefunction, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/De_Broglie–Bohm_theory
This derivative is 0 forall t at x=0,
hence the dBB-particle does not move at all, and hence dBB cannot reproduce QM results.
A similar critique of dBB theory has already been proposed. Nevertheless, the critique has not been valid, as explained in
http://arxiv.org/abs/quant-ph/0305131

In short, if you assume that initial wave function is a delta function, then such a wave function is a mathematically pathological object which never occurs in nature. If, on the other hand, you replace the initial delta function with a very narrow Gaussian, then the point x=0 has a measure zero, i.e., there is zero probability that the initial position will be exactly x=0. For any other initial position x close to 0 but not exactly 0, your argument does not longer work.
 
  • #3
Demystifier, so you are saying that they indeed have different predictions, but in practice we will never (probability zero) will see a disagreement.
 
  • #4
martinbn said:
Demystifier, so you are saying that they indeed have different predictions, but in practice we will never (probability zero) will see a disagreement.
You can put it this way, but a more convenient way to express it is to say that they are different theories with identical PROBABILISTIC predictions.
 
  • #5
I did some calculation with a gaussian distribution instead of a maladive Dirac delta (given by Wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uncertainty_principle under Constant momentum, setting p0=0)

Psi(x,t)=1/Sqrt(1+iw0t)*exp(-x^2/x0/(1+iw0t))*N

I get for (dPsi/dx)/Psi=-2x/x0/(1+iw0t)

Then the guiding equation of dBB (I took http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/De_Broglie%E2%80%93Bohm_theory under overview says we have to take the imaginary part : hence the speed given by dBB is -xw0t/(1+w0^2t^2)

So we see that for t>0 the speed is of opposite sign to the position, hence the particle goes towards 0.
 
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  • #6
jk22 said:
I did some calculation with a gaussian distribution instead of a maladive Dirac delta (given by Wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uncertainty_principle under Constant momentum, setting p0=0)

Psi(x,t)=1/Sqrt(1+iw0t)*exp(-x^2/x0/(1+iw0t))*N

I get for (dPsi/dx)/Psi=-2x/x0/(1+iw0t)

Then the guiding equation of dBB (I took http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/De_Broglie%E2%80%93Bohm_theory under overview says we have to take the imaginary part : hence the speed given by dBB is -xw0t/(1+w0^2t^2)

So we see that for t>0 the speed is of opposite sign to the position, hence the particle goes towards 0.
I think you made a sign error in taking the imaginary part. The imaginary part of 1/(1+i) is negative, not positive. To see this, multiply both the numerator and the denominator with (1-i).
 
  • #7
jk22 said:
This derivative is 0 forall t at x=0,
and the probability amplitude is infinite, so what is infinite times 0?
 
  • #8
thanks demystifier i lose my skills. If we now imagine the particle a bit off 0 then it goes towards infinity always in the same direction (but after a measurement what happens ?)
in qm if you measure the particle at place dx and after a while again then it could have gone in the other direction.(?)
 
  • #9
jk22 said:
thanks demystifier i lose my skills.
How old are you? :wink:

jk22 said:
If we now imagine the particle a bit off 0 then it goes towards infinity always in the same direction (but after a measurement what happens ?)
in qm if you measure the particle at place dx and after a while again then it could have gone in the other direction.(?)
The measurement changes the wave function, in both standard QM and dBB. If you measure the position at time t, then the wide Gaussian at t splits into a large number of narrow non-overlaping Gaussians at t+delta t, where delta t is time during which the measurement-causing interaction takes place. During the time delta t, the particle in dBB ends up in one and only one of these narrow Gaussians. Once the particle ends up in one of these Gaussians, the other narrow Gaussians do not longer influence the motion of the particle. From the point of view of the particle, it is effectively the same as if the wave function collapsed to the narrow Gaussian. That's how dBB explans the illusion of wave function collapse, without the actual collapse.
 
  • #10
Demystifier said:
How old are you?
Im 37 and former student. But the problem is that i had to stop due to health (mind) problems. It is probably now hopeless for me to go on with physics (maybe i should put this in the medical part)
 
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  • #11
jk22 said:
Im 37 and former student. But the problem is that i had to stop due to health (mind) problems. It is probably now hopeless for me to go on with physics (maybe i should put this in the medical part)
Even if it is too late to become a professional physicist, it is certainly not too late to be a good amateur. From the posts I've seen I can tell that your physical and mathematical reasoning is quite good. The little mistake you made can happen to anybody. :smile:
 
  • #12
I got another point I don't understand. In QM the wavefunction delocalizes in position space, whereas the momentum space localizes around 0 (I'm not sure about this point).

However in dBB the speed in function of time can be computed by solving the differential equation above and turns out to increase proportionally with respect to time (if I haven't made a mistake) ?
 
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  • #13
jk22 said:
However in dBB the speed in function of time can be computed by solving the differential equation above and turns out to increase proportionally with respect to time (if I haven't made a mistake) ?
I think you did. Speed does not need to increase with time.
 
  • #14
how do you compute this speed to see that ?

Ah i think i found my mistake the speed is propto (1+w0^2t^2)^(1/2w0^2-1) so that if 2w0^2>1 the speed tends towards 0.

Was this right ?
 
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  • #15
I was talking about the speed for a general wave function. Concerning this special case, I will leave the calculation details to you. :smile:
 
  • #16
Demystifier said:
You can put it this way, but a more convenient way to express it is to say that they are different theories with identical PROBABILISTIC predictions.
So are there non-probabilistic predictions on which the two theories differ? If so, would it in principle be possible to disprove Bohmian mechanics while keeping standard quantum mechanics intact?
 
  • #17
M

lugita15 said:
So are there non-probabilistic predictions on which the two theories differ? If so, would it in principle be possible to disprove Bohmian mechanics while keeping standard quantum mechanics intact?

A few years ago there was a bit of work done on trying to experimentally test Bohm - check out:
http://arxiv.org/pdf/quant-ph/0206196v1.pdf

At the time I was really excited and thought it had been disproved. I got caught up in the hoopla - but there were these guys saying - hang on - somethings not right here - Bohm was deliberately concocted to be the same as bog standard QM - this should not be possible. I thought - they were just trying to deny the truth. But guess what - it turned out they were correct - there was a mistake and if I remember correctly it was also an incorrect use of the Dirac Delta function. Bottom line here is because of the way Bohm is designed its not possible to actually tell the difference.

That does not apply to some other interpretations however - one of my favorite of that type is Primary State Diffusion:
http://arxiv.org/pdf/quant-ph/9508021.pdf

Nice theory - and I rather like it (yea I have a background in Stochastic Calculus, White Noise Functional's etc - nice math area as well - it also uses Rigged Hilbert Spaces) - but I heard a while ago it had been experimentally refuted.

Thanks
Bill
 
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  • #18
lugita15 said:
So are there non-probabilistic predictions on which the two theories differ? If so, would it in principle be possible to disprove Bohmian mechanics while keeping standard quantum mechanics intact?
People are trying to find out such a thing, but not yet completely successfully. For example, in
http://arxiv.org/abs/1209.5196
I argue that there are non-probabilistic predictions which can be used to experimentally distinguish different versions of Bohmian mechanics itself, and that experiments prefer the standard version of Bohmian mechanics. I believe it is at least a step.
 

1. What is dBB theory?

dBB (de Broglie-Bohm) theory, also known as pilot wave theory, is a deterministic interpretation of quantum mechanics that proposes the existence of a guiding wave that determines the behavior of particles.

2. How does dBB theory reproduce quantum results?

dBB theory reproduces quantum results by incorporating the concept of a guiding wave that influences the movement of particles in a deterministic manner, rather than relying on probability and randomness as in traditional quantum mechanics.

3. Is dBB theory widely accepted in the scientific community?

No, dBB theory is not widely accepted in the scientific community. While it does reproduce quantum results, it is a controversial interpretation of quantum mechanics and is not as widely studied or supported as other interpretations.

4. What are the limitations of dBB theory?

One major limitation of dBB theory is that it does not provide a complete explanation for all quantum phenomena, particularly those involving entanglement. It also introduces additional complexities in trying to explain the behavior of particles within a classical framework.

5. What are the potential implications of dBB theory?

If dBB theory were to be widely accepted and proven to accurately reproduce quantum results, it could potentially revolutionize our understanding of the nature of reality and the fundamental laws of physics. It could also have practical applications in fields such as quantum computing and quantum cryptography.

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