Play Copenhagen by Michael Frayn

  • Context: Undergrad 
  • Thread starter Thread starter Gale
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Copenhagen
Click For Summary

Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the play "Copenhagen" by Michael Frayn, focusing on its portrayal of the historical meeting between Niels Bohr and Werner Heisenberg in 1941. Participants explore the intersection of physics concepts, particularly uncertainty and complementarity, with the narrative of the play. The conversation includes inquiries about the implications of these concepts in the context of the characters' interactions and the broader themes presented in the play.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Debate/contested
  • Technical explanation

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants propose that uncertainty refers to the inability to measure two conjugate variables, such as position and velocity, simultaneously, and that observations affect the system being measured.
  • Others argue that the uncertainty principle allows for simultaneous determination of position and momentum under certain conditions, but emphasizes that repeated measurements may yield different results.
  • There is a discussion about complementarity, with some participants suggesting it means that light and particles can be viewed as both waves and particles, existing in both states simultaneously.
  • A participant introduces the idea of Schrödinger's cat, suggesting that the scenario illustrates superposition and the collapse of wave functions upon observation, while others refine this view by discussing the implications of superposition for the observer as well.
  • Some participants challenge the notion that complementarity implies two distinct ways of viewing quantum phenomena, suggesting instead that it reflects the limitations of classical interpretations of quantum mechanics.
  • Examples from the play, such as Heisenberg's skiing analogy, are used to illustrate the principles of uncertainty and complementarity in a narrative context, prompting further exploration of these concepts.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express a range of views on the interpretations of uncertainty and complementarity, with no clear consensus reached. Some points are contested, particularly regarding the implications of measurements and the nature of wave functions.

Contextual Notes

Participants note limitations in their understanding of the concepts discussed, indicating a reliance on various interpretations and the complexity of quantum mechanics. There is also mention of the need for clearer definitions and explanations of the principles as they relate to the play.

Gale
Messages
683
Reaction score
1
play "Copenhagen" by Michael Frayn

Ok, this may seem a bit weird, and maybe it seems inappropriate for the physics forum... but eh, move it somewhere more appropriate if necessary.

Ok, first, this is with regards to the play "Copenhagen" by Michael Frayn. if you've read it or seen it, awesome, if not, i think maybe you might still be able to post something productive for me. Copenhagen is about Neils Bohr and Werner Heisenberg's infamous meeting in Copenhagen, 1941. The interesting thing about the play, (...er in my opinion i guess...) is that Frayn sort of uses physics to explain history sort of, (that might be phrased weird, bare with me.)

So the science used... these are my rough explanations thus far, i don't need super in depth, but i want to have the basic ideas. I read a few books a while ago, so i have a rough understanding of the ideas mostly, and I've looked them up a little to try and gain a more cohernent understanding. But mostly, my memory is very poor indeed, and i keep mixing things up, so eh... here's what i have:

uncertainty: inability to measure with certainty two conjugate variables (ie, position and velocity) simultaneously.
also, this means that our measurements and observations effect the system and therefore we cannot make conclusions about a system that is unobserved. (or we're resticted as for what sorts of conclusions we can make.)

complementarity: we can view er, light, electrons.. everything (?) as a particle or wave, but it/(they) exist as both at the same time.

i haven't done all my research yet, but is shrodingers cat about uncertainty, or complementarity or something else entirely? I just don't remember what I've read so well... hmm... and the dual slit thing... that's complementarity too right? or..? the particle goes through both slits at the same time... that's... complementarity i think, or maybe not...

right well anyways, he uses those two things a lot. He talks about how Heisenbergs skiing being up against the uncertainty principle because he skiied so fast, he couldn't know where he was, or if he knew where he was, he wouldn't know how fast he was going. or how when he came to a crevasse, in his mind he swerved both right and left at the same time, like in complementarity.

The skiing examples are most explicit, but he also uses these principles to explain some of the confusion about neils and werner's meeting. that's more in depth, requires much more analysis, and is what my report is mostly on.

anyways. I was hoping to get my definitions better refined. most of what I've read is really lengthy, so i need condensed definetions that will be suitable for my presentation, but also as coherent as possible. Of course, i want to understand the principles best i can as well, so that i can explain if I'm asked questions, but... eh, i think you know what i mean. Also, if you're familiar with the play, or the meeting between bohr and Heisenberg, any general input about that is welcome.

also, there's one thing in the play that seems like Frayn is trying again to use science as a context for what's happening, but I'm not sure what he's doing. There's a scene where neils, werner, and margarethe, (borh's wife,) are looking at each other, and each of them sees the other two, but has difficulty realizing that they too, are in the room... like, because they are both the observer and the subject... i dunno. seems maybe like uncertainty again, and the fact that introducing a means of observation warps their view of themselves or something... i dunno...

Anyways, um, thanks in advance i guess... heh..

~gale~
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Hi Gale;
Again, no expertise here, but somebody has to get this started. I'll stick with the cat. The whole premise of the scenerio isn't that we don't know whether or not the cat is alive. It's that the wave functions describing the cat simultaneously exist in all possible states from fully alive to fully dead. Only when some event, such as observation, disturbs the system does one function 'collapse' into reality. A current theory, which I really like just because it weirds people out, is that the unfulfilled functions don't just disappear. They each collapse into a reality of their own and create a new universe parallel to the main one. So somewhere the observer sees a dead cat, and somewhere else the same guy sees a live one. I don't know what level of acceptance this idea has, though.

I'm really looking forward to reading the responses from more knowledgeable folks than myself.
 
It's somewhat more palatable to remove the hypothesis that a "new universe" is created, and simply say that the superposition extends to you.

The system of you + cat is merely in a superposition of |dead cat + you see dead cat> and |live cat + you see live cat>.
 
Gale17 said:
uncertainty: inability to measure with certainty two conjugate variables (ie, position and velocity) simultaneously.
also,

Not really. Take the uncertainty relation for momentum p and position x. Now, most people say that you cannot measure both x and p with perfect accuracy at the same time. That is correct but you need to read things right. Suppose (just imagine this) that you measure the momentum of an electron that passes through a detector. You know the position of the detector and therefore you also know the position of the electron. Also, thanks to the measurement you also know the electron's momentum. So you know both x and p at the same time. Now, the clue is that if you were to measure the momentum of that same electron again at the same detector, you will get another p-value. Keep in mind that this not really possible though but it illustrates how you need to look at the HUP. You can simultaneously determine both x and p, only if you measure again you won't get the same values : that is the uncertainty.

Diffraction through an opening (like the Young experiment) really is a manifestation of the uncertainty principle in 'classical physics' : the smaller the opening, the more the wave will spread out. Just think of pushing on a water-tube when you are gardening : that's the real HUP for ya.

this means that our measurements and observations effect the system and therefore we cannot make conclusions about a system that is unobserved. (or we're resticted as for what sorts of conclusions we can make.)

No, these are the non-commuting observables of QM. When performing measurements to determine the (eigen)values of such operators, the actual measurement will influence the system that you are measuring. So the measurement of operator A has an influence on the measurement of operator B and the other way around.

complementarity: we can view er, light, electrons.. everything (?) as a particle or wave, but it/(they) exist as both at the same time.

That's a classic. I refer to my journal : the 'five socalled easy pieces entry'
Complementarity, according to mr Bohr means that some experiments are best described using the wave-like notion (like the Young experiment) and others are best treated with a particle like notion (like the photo-electric effect). We need both visions in order to acquire a complete description of mother nature.

No, keep in mind that this duality does NOT mean that there are TWO different ways in QM to look at light (for example) : either a wave or a bunch of particles. That is just how we (humans) look at this with our "classical" eyes. Besides when we talk about particles, don't think of classical particles (ie entities with finite spatial boundaries) but think of entities with finite amounts of energies (this is the actual energy quantization). So what we call space in our classical minds, now really is "energy-space" you see? In energy-coordinates, these particles would look like point particles, where every point denotes a certain energy value.

Read Joachain and Bransden 'intro to QM' for this...they do a great job at explaining this.

i haven't done all my research yet, but is shrodingers cat about uncertainty, or complementarity or something else entirely? I just don't remember what I've read so well... hmm... and the dual slit thing... that's complementarity too right? or..? the particle goes through both slits at the same time... that's... complementarity i think, or maybe not...

The double slit thing and the cat thing really are a manifestation of another basic ingredient of QM : superposition. A QM state really is a summation of all possible states. You can be either alive or dead so prior to any measurement, you state is a summation of dead and alive. A qubit is a summation of 0 and 1. and so on...When you measure, the wavefunction collapses, meaning that the superposition is broken and only one of the states remain.

Beware of the double slit thing though. The actual interference happens between the two possible states of an electron : pass through opening 1 or pass through opening 2. These things are expressed by the wavefunction which is not the same as the actual electron. The wavefunction gives you a probability to find the electron in a certain finite spatial area. The interference, thus happens between the actual paths that an electron can follow.

regards
marlon

there are other ways of interpreting the QM-measurements like Multi Universa, decoherence,...but they all suck, trust me
[/QUOTE]
 
Gale17 said:
There's a scene where neils, werner, and margarethe, (borh's wife,) are looking at each other, and each of them sees the other two, but has difficulty realizing that they too, are in the room... like, because they are both the observer and the subject... i dunno. seems maybe like uncertainty again, and the fact that introducing a means of observation warps their view of themselves or something... i dunno...
Sounds like the claim that the observer is inseparable from the observed. It is impossible to oberve a phenomenon without affecting the outcome. (A metaphor: a scientist tries to fish a coin out of his living room couch. Every time he pulls the cushion back to reach in, the coin slips further down.) More practically, you cannot know where a photon is (i.e. you cannot observe it) without altering its trajectory, velocity or position.

Many attempted refutations of Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle rely on determining a particle's position with arbitrary accuracy and then determining its position with some arbitrary level of accuracy. Heisenberg points out that the first contaminates the second, destroying the information gained.

Good play BTW, I enjoyed it.
 

Similar threads

  • · Replies 13 ·
Replies
13
Views
2K
  • · Replies 18 ·
Replies
18
Views
2K
  • · Replies 41 ·
2
Replies
41
Views
6K
  • · Replies 13 ·
Replies
13
Views
3K
  • · Replies 43 ·
2
Replies
43
Views
10K
  • · Replies 21 ·
Replies
21
Views
4K
  • · Replies 13 ·
Replies
13
Views
2K
  • · Replies 6 ·
Replies
6
Views
1K
  • · Replies 4 ·
Replies
4
Views
2K
  • · Replies 17 ·
Replies
17
Views
3K