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RockyMarciano said:This is purely semantic but both the insight and thread are about semantics so why not get it right?. Fluctuation is a word that is synonim both of oscillation and of indeterminacy or uncertainty. All it means in the quantum context is the Heisenberg indeterminacy of the ground state, and what fluctuates(vacillates i.e. it is intrinsically uncertain) is precisely the noncommuting observables. Of course many people by extension thinks about something moving or oscillating, that I guess it is what you understand if you disregard the meaning of fluctuation as vacillation/indeterminacy. Since Heisenberg indeterminacy lies at the heart of the quantum departure from classical physics, quantum fluctuations by extension are also referred by many as this departure from classicality.
On the other hand if one is strict with the math not even the fields or the waves actually oscillate, since the math always describes a rigid picture, a shortcoming of analysis. But this should show just how ridiculous can blind strictness get.
But it seems vacuum fluctuation is mentioned more in QED and you are talking about "quantum fluctuations"
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_fluctuation
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/QED_vacuum
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vacuum_polarization
so some "fluctuation" is related to vacuum in the vicinity of interactions others to an otherwise empty interstellar vacuum. It sound like many concepts being mixed up.