audioloop
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BruceW said:aha! oh yeah, I didn't even look at the authors. I should really get into the habit of that. Although, there is not much discussion about the possible implications for the 'Penrose interpretation', I guess probably because the energy difference would still not nearly be great enough to cause the 'objective collapse'.
they base it from:
(and refer also to gravitationally induced collapse)
Scheme to probe the decoherence of a macroscopic object
S. Bose, K. Jacobs, P. L. Knight
Optics Section, The Blackett Laboratory, Imperial College, London SW7 2BZ, England
http://pra.aps.org/abstract/PRA/v59/i5/p3204_1
"We propose a quantum optical version of Schrödinger’s famous gedanken experiment in which the state of a microscopic system (a cavity field) becomes entangled with and disentangled from the state of a massive object (a movable mirror). Despite the fact that a mixture of Schrödinger cat states is produced during the evolution (due to the fact that the macroscopic mirror starts off in a thermal state), this setup allows us to systematically probe the rules by which a superposition of spatially separated states of a macroscopic object decoheres. The parameter regime required to test environment-induced decoherence models is found to be close to those currently realizable, while that required to detect gravitationally induced collapse is well beyond current technology"
BruceW said:I know that there is also a lot of useful research into stuff like decoherence times, and how to try to reduce interaction of quantum systems with environment.
right, decoherence times vs superposition times and cooling near zero deegres.
keith schwab
http://www.kschwabresearch.com/
The Schwab Group pursues the development and applications of the most advanced measurement techniques to both probe the fundamental quantum nature of the physical world, and to further nanoscience and nanotechnology. Currently our work has been focused on the exploration of the quantum properties of nanoscale electro-mechanical structures at ultra-low temperatures, and the applications of nanofabrication to atomic and quantum optics experiments.
Aspelmeyer, Schwab, Zeilinger.
Quantum Upsizing
http://fqxi.org/data/articles/Schwab_Asp_Zeil.pdf
Quantum effects are mysterious, says Schwab. “Why do they work on a small
scale but not at a big scale?”
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