Mark M said:
First of all, it isn't observation that causes particles to "collapse" to one state, it's interfering with them. It appears as if observation causes this, because to observe something, you must shine light on it it, or set up a detector. This is called decoherance.
From what I understand, that's not quite it. Instead, it's more like the particles are interfering with us. Decoherence isn't that the environment has leaked into the system, but rather the system has leaked into the environment.
What I mean? I mean that decoherence is what happens when the environment suddenly depends on the system being observed. That is, when you measure the particle, there is suddenly a LOT of cells in your brain that change to reflect what you measured, so now your state of being depends on the state of the system being observed.
jeffmoor said:
So, tell me if I understand... A particle, when left alone, does exist, and has a specific position, charge, and momentum at each instantaneous moment in time. Because of uncertainty (our inability to measure it without interfering with it) we can't know these all at once, so describe the particle's properties with a wave function. It's not that, in all reality, the particle doesn't have specific values for these properties, it's just that we can't measure them. The wave function is our probabalistic descriptor of the particle. Is this true?
That is somehow what is explained at many textbooks, but it's not quite true. Uncertainty isn't on the map, it's in the territory; that is, it's a part of the world, it's not a part of how we understand it. It has been explained above that there are properties which cannot be known simultaneously. That has nothing to do with our ability to measure it, we can measure either property (momentum or position) with a high degree of accuracy without affecting it too much. But talking for instance about momentum and position, once the wavefunction describing a single electron's position has been confined to a narrow area (that is, its position is known with some accuracy), the momentum becomes indefinite, and it can take any value.
bugatti79 said:
But why do we need a wave function to describe that the properties are so called 'blurred' when we know that the particles have distinct properties even when we are not 'measuring/interacting with them with our machines?
In other words, why do we describe something as 'blurred' or the 'particle is in many positions at once' just because we can't measure it with 100% certainty?
As I said, it's not about measuring. It really is blurred. An electron really is in many places
at the same time, and furthermore, those places can even interact! (That is, one electron can interact with itself.) The particles have some distinct properties that are fixed, like mass, but there are others that are not fixed.
DrChinese said:
Your last statement (wave function being probabilistic descriptor) is correct. However, we don't really know where the line is as to the source of the apparently random variations that are seen.
The idea that a wavefunction describes a probability is called the non-realistic view of the wavefunction. There's another idea that claims that the wavefunction is an actual part of the universe, something physically real, instead of just a description of "randomness".