Macro Superposition: Does Size Matter?

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The discussion centers on the relationship between the size of objects and their quantum superposition, questioning whether larger objects have smaller detectable superpositions compared to smaller ones like atoms. It is noted that while larger objects can exhibit superposition, maintaining coherence becomes increasingly difficult due to environmental interactions, which leads to decoherence. The double-slit experiment demonstrates that even electrons can show interference patterns without complete isolation from their environment, suggesting that quantum effects can still be observed under certain conditions. Cooling objects to low temperatures can help reduce decoherence, allowing for the observation of quantum behavior in larger objects. Overall, the conversation emphasizes the complexity of quantum mechanics and the challenges in observing superposition in macroscopic systems.
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My question preferibily if sci advisors could answer this as objects get bigger does the radius or space of its superposition become smaller to the point at which it is so miniscule its hard to notice. Wheras smaller objects like atoms have huge superpositions and can be in california and new york at the same time. On the other hand the superposition of a pencil is so small that its the microscopic size of a Angstrom.

Any help is appreciated
 
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you can manipulate to be precise,
more spread momentum, less spread position.
 
I don't understand can you clarify please and adress whether there is a diffrence in superposition size between macro and micro objects.
 
The wavelength of the 'wave-packet' of large objects is so small its virtually impossible to detect its quantum character.

Thanks
Bill
 
batmanandjoker said:
This is true but how do you explain this

http://www.nature.com/news/2010/100317/full/news.2010.130.html

they detected superposition in a macro object could you please explain your perspective on this article. Thanks.

Look at what they needed to do to "detect" it.

Size isn't the issue. It's the ability to maintain coherence over space and time! It gets progressively more difficult to maintain such coherence as the object gets bigger, and thus, makes it more difficult to detect such quantum effects.

Zz.
 
ZapperZ said:
It's the ability to maintain coherence over space and time!

That's exactly it. Left to itself a wave-packet will naturally spread. What keeps it from doing that is its decohered by the environment.

In the linked article they spent a lot of effort removing the environment. That's very hard to do, but not impossible. But when its done some very strange effects appear even for macro objects.

Nowadays we know fairly well the reason we have a classical world is its constantly being entangled with its environment and decohered. For example a few stray photons from the CBMR is enough to decohere a dust particle and give it a definite position.

Thanks
Bill
 
Then why does the double slit experiment with a laser pen forexample display an interferance pattern in high school class experiments since in the classroom the enviorment has not obviously been removed yet we can see superposition on the backboard.
 
batmanandjoker said:
Then why does the double slit experiment with a laser pen forexample display an interferance pattern in high school class experiments since in the classroom the enviorment has not obviously been removed yet we can see superposition on the backboard.

It is because photons do not interact that much with the air environment. That's why we use photons in many EPR-type experiment - they maintain coherence longer in time and distance!

Zz.
 
  • #10
Does this only apply to photons
 
  • #11
batmanandjoker said:
Does this only apply to photons

Does what apply only to photons?

Zz.
 
  • #12
I think he means "does interference only apply to photons" in which case I think the answer is no, you can observe decoherence and constructive and destructive interference with just about any lepton.
 
  • #13
My real question is it only photons that we can see macro superposition IE double slit interferance without isolating the particles from the outside world.Are photons "special" in this regard.
 
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  • #14
batmanandjoker said:
My real question is it only photons that we can see macro superposition IE double slit interferance without isolating the particles from the outside world.Are photons "special" in this regard.
No. The double slit experiment has been carried out without isolating single electrons from their 'environment'(whatever that means quantum mechanically!) or isolating them from interacting with the slits(electrons somehow do not seem to care about interaction with the plate that houses the slits so no decoherence there).

http://physicsworld.com/cws/article/news/2013/mar/14/feynmans-double-slit-experiment-gets-a-makeoverBTW, if you want a real understanding of what is going on, a 'bare' decoherence theory will only get you half-way at most.
 
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  • #15
Maui said:
No. The double slit experiment has been carried out without isolating single electrons from their 'environment'(whatever that means quantum mechanically!) or isolating them from interacting with the slits(electrons somehow do not seem to care about interaction with the plate that houses the slits so no decoherence there).

http://physicsworld.com/cws/article/news/2013/mar/14/feynmans-double-slit-experiment-gets-a-makeover


BTW, if you want a real understanding of what is going on, a 'bare' decoherence theory will only get you half-way at most.

is this true in refrence to electrons, I feel there is a contradiction between entanglment forming a classical world and the double slit exhibiting superpositions of diffrent particles
 
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  • #16
batmanandjoker said:
is this true in refrence to electrons



What do you mean? The link I posted was about an experiment done with electrons.

All quantum particles can show interference effects, it's just that the bigger the object, the harder it is for quantumness to be observed(massive accelerated particles display almost classical behavior). What is it that you are asking?
 
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  • #17
What I am asking is the double slit experiment the only example of superposition in the macro world without isolating the particles from the external enviorment and are there other examples other than the double slit. The sci advisors in the above posts said that when a particle interacts with the outside world it loses its quantum properties "entanglment occurs" and collapses yet the double slit contradicts this. I am very confused at this point also the link I posted earlier about the metal paddle its superposition or eigenstates must be very small or miniscule correct.

Any answers from mentors or sci advisors would be greatly aprreciated.
 
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  • #18
batmanandjoker said:
What I am asking is the double slit experiment the only example of superposition in the macro world without isolating the particles from the external enviorment and are there other examples other than the double slit. The sci advisors in the above posts said that when a particle interacts with the the outside world it loses is quantum properties and collapses yet the double slit contradicts this.
No. Bigger objects do tend to lose their coherence very fast and there have been experiments with double slits and more massive objects where special measures were taken to avoid decoherence. With single free electrons decoherence plays much lesser role.
I am very confused at this point also the link I posted earlier about the metal paddle its superposition or eigenstates must be very small or miniscule correct.

Any answer from mentors or sci advisors would be greatly aprreciated.
That paddle is almost a classical object and in no way comparable to single electrons or photons. It's huge and massive.
 
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  • #19
But can someone other than maui explain how we live in an entangled world which is always collapsed by the enviorment but at the the same time the double slit expeirment can be performed with particles IE electrons not isolated by the enviorment and not collapse. There is an inconsistinsy here.
 
  • #20
batmanandjoker said:
But can someone other than maui explain how we live in an entangled world which is always collapsed by the enviorment but at the the same time the double slit expeirment can be performed with particles

There is no inconsistency.

Entanglement, and decoherence is a form of entanglement, requires interaction. If things are arranged so the interaction is weak, and hence negligible, then interference effects can occur.

Crystal diffraction, which demonstrates the quantum nature of electrons, I believe is done in a vacuum. Not likely to be much interaction there.

batmanandjoker said:
IE electrons not isolated by the enviorment and not collapse.

Like I said I am pretty sure its done in a vacuum. Valves for example need a reasonably good one to have an electron stream to even work.

Thanks
Bill
 
  • #21
so cooling a tiny metal paddle until it reached its quantum mechanical 'ground state' — the lowest-energy state permitted by quantum mechanics untangles the paddle from the external enviorment. Why and how does cooling or tempature manipulation separate macro objects from the external enviorment IE decoherence. And at what point is a micro object considered a macro object what's the tipping point.
 
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  • #22
batmanandjoker said:
But can someone other than maui explain how we live in an entangled world which is always collapsed by the enviorment but at the the same time the double slit expeirment can be performed with particles IE electrons not isolated by the enviorment and not collapse. There is an inconsistinsy here.

You really should look up the circumstances surrounding these experiments here. There are plenty of stuff you can find on the web!

The electron double slit experiment, and in fact, ALL electron diffraction experiments, are done in vacuum! I perform electron diffraction experiments almost every week (LEED and RHEED), and they are all in 10^-9 Torr or better! These electrons don't interact with the "environment". If they do, you'll loose the single-particle coherence.

Also, please read this:

https://www.physicsforums.com/showpost.php?p=1498616&postcount=55

There are NO inconsistencies here.

Zz.
 
  • #23
so cooling an object to extreme tempatures creates a vacuum is this correct also if something as big as a truck is put in a vacuum I know it will exhibit superposition but will it be a smaller superposition than say the paddle in a vaccum.
 
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  • #24
batmanandjoker said:
so cooling an object to extreme tempatures creates a vacuum is this correct also if something as big as a truck is put in a vacuum I know it will exhibit superposition but will it be a smaller superposition than say the paddle in a vaccum.

You are all over the place here.

Cooling an object has nothing to do with creating a vacuum. I dip something in liquid nitrogen. Did I just create a vacuum? Think about it.

Zz.
 
  • #25
batmanandjoker said:
so cooling an object to extreme tempatures creates a vacuum is this correct also if something as big as a truck is put in a vacuum I know it will exhibit superposition but will it be a smaller superposition than say the paddle in a vaccum.

there are planned experiments on bigger objects in decoherence free ambients to see if the superposition persist or is lost.


.
 
  • #26
batmanandjoker said:
so cooling a tiny metal paddle until it reached its quantum mechanical 'ground state' — the lowest-energy state permitted by quantum mechanics untangles the paddle from the external enviorment. Why and how does cooling or tempature manipulation separate macro objects from the external enviorment IE decoherence. And at what point is a micro object considered a macro object what's the tipping point.

Its obvious. Take temperature. For an object to heat up it needs to come into contact with objects at a higher temperature or absorb radiation (ie photons) or something similar. It gets entangled with it. This is basic thermodynamics.

One of the issues here is physics is a highly interconnected area. If you want to delve into advanced areas such as exactly how we get things to show quantum behavior, rather than like most people at the beginning level simply accept things have been so arranged for it to happen, then stuff that is rather obvious once you have gone a bit beyond that, but is opaque until you do, make it difficult to sort things out.

The temperature quantum effects start to show themselves depends on the object, but generally its a technological tour-de-force accomplishing it.

The simplest is probably liquid helium:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liquid_helium

Thanks
Bill
 
  • #27
batmanandjoker said:
so cooling an object to extreme tempatures creates a vacuum is this correct also if something as big as a truck is put in a vacuum I know it will exhibit superposition but will it be a smaller superposition than say the paddle in a vaccum.

Like Zapper said you are all over the place.

You need to remove interactions to prevent decoherence. There are many causes of interaction - excitation from somewhere that raises temperature (eg being jostled by molecules and atoms you are in contact with or radiation ie photons), air, etc etc.

Its absolutely insidious as far as maintaining coherence is concerned - as I often post a few stray photons from the cosmic background radiation is enough to decohere a dust particle and give it a position. Eliminating all this is not trivial.

It is a technological nightmare to show quantum effects for macro objects (other than stuff like say holes in semiconductors that are required for transistors to work - but I don't think that's what you have in mind). Its a marvel it has been done - but when done some very strange effects emerge.

Doing it for photons is easy - they interact even weakly with air. Electrons is harder - you need a vacuum - but doing that has been around for quite a while eg thermionic valves. Macro objects is however a whole new ball game we are only now starting to really get into. We have had stuff like liquid helium around, but that is only the start.

Thanks
Bill
 
  • #28
So electrons shot by an electron gun should decohere upon passing through the slits(due to interaction) and only display classically permited behavior. But they don't.
 
  • #29
because they are shot in a vaccum. Any ways I am all over the place because I am quite confused being a beginner but I have another question superposition is just a statistical probability wave function. Is this correct and if someone could adress some of my earlier and I know stupidly obvius questions for sci advisors it would be much appreciated. I appreciate all the help you all have given me so far.
 
  • #30
batmanandjoker said:
because they are shot in a vaccum.

The vacuum removes the air, not the slits. If you remove the slits, it's no longer a double slit experiment. There exist no classically consistent accounts no matter who and what will say otherwise.
 

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