Quantum Decoherence - how fast does it propagate?

In summary, the conversation discusses the concept of decoherence and its effects on an observer in different scenarios. Decoherence is the process in which a quantum system interacts with its environment, causing it to lose its quantum properties and behave classically. It is believed to occur almost instantly, but the exact speed is still unknown. The conversation also touches on different interpretations of quantum mechanics and their implications on decoherence.
  • #1
Dmitry67
2,567
1
Here, in Saint Petersburg, Russia I open a box with a Schroedinger cat
I get immediately decoherenced so I see only one cat - dead or alive

How soon that decoherence 'hits' you in the US?
Photons can not travel directly to another part of the globe, they get absorbed/reemitted, losing the information on the way.

I believe this is a valid question (no philosophy, just calculations) but I can not answer it.
 
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  • #2
"losing the information" seems like the wrong choice of words in the context of decoherence, but sure, decoherence should "propagate" at a medium-dependent speed (for example, you assumed at the start that the box could slow it dramatically). Just don't suggest that your lab could transmit the message faster than decoherence propagates (and since such indirect routes are the stuff of decoherence, I'm thinking that the answer to your question will be very close to c).
 
  • #3
I can't really make sense of the question. While I can imagine that:
1. You were never in a coherent superposition of "You see a live cat" and "You see a dead cat"
2. The joint (relative) state of you and the cat was* in a superposition of "The cat is alive and you see a live cat" and "The cat is dead and you see a live cat", but that pretty much instantly decohered as you interacted with the environment.
3. The (relative) state of the U.S. contains no information about you or the cat, so I have no idea what coherence you are wondering about decohering.

(This, of course, assumes that QM works on planetary scales, and reality doesn't contradict decoherence-based interpretations)
 
  • #4
Lets assume that the box is ideal.

I understand that distant observer will be decoherenced quickly if he observes the experiment using video.

But what if not? In order to be de-coherenced, you need to absorb at least few photons from the Saint-Petersburg carrying the information of what is inside the box.

I doubt you will be receiving any photons from there. Then you need to wait for the photons to be absorbed by the walls of the laboartory (so they are de-coherenced with a box). Then, the walls emit photons outside, so the whole street is de-coherenced etc. I think it might takes seconds, minutes or even hours!
 
  • #5
Hurky,

1,2. Yes, I am decoherenced with the cat almost instantly (about 10^-23 sec) based on the number of photons. I am aware of that.

3. I don't understand you point
In order for the decoherence to propagate objects must interact with each other.

To give you another example, let's say I open a box at 1am,
and you are on the Moon. So, at 1:00:01am on Moon light could not reach Moon, hence, the decoherence could not accur yet for you.

Not let's say you are on the invisible side of the Moon :)
 
  • #6
Sorry Dmityr67 - I think you cannot avoid philosophy in this case - the "waveform" is not directly observable - you need to pick an interpretation for an "explanation". I don't think you should use the word decoherence as this has a specific meaning and it is not clear that's what you mean.
 
  • #7
Dmitry67 said:
Hurky,

1,2. Yes, I am decoherenced with the cat almost instantly (about 10^-23 sec) based on the number of photons. I am aware of that.

3. I don't understand you point
In order for the decoherence to propagate objects must interact with each other.

To give you another example, let's say I open a box at 1am,
and you are on the Moon. So, at 1:00:01am on Moon light could not reach Moon, hence, the decoherence could not accur yet for you.

Not let's say you are on the invisible side of the Moon :)



Edit: You are right. If the universe splits into different states/universes at each interaction, the whole universe must be entangled so that information about the decohered state could travel instantaneously. Hence if he's on Moon and his wife runs a red light, he would decohere(while he's still on the Moon) in a state where his wife is either dead or alive. He wouldn't know that state until he lands back on Earth, but for him to remain in the branch where his wife remained alive, decoherence have to be instantaneous regardless of distance.
 
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  • #8
Is Wavejumper arguing against the Many-Worlds interpretation. It sounds like it...;-)
 
  • #9
shaun_o_kane said:
Is Wavejumper arguing against the Many-Worlds interpretation. It sounds like it...;-)

I was always under the impression that it was the deoherence interpretation that implied strongly the presence of multiple universes. How am i arguing against it when i am using it to form a thesis that the universe must be entangled so that a decohered state on Earth would reach instantaneously the Moon where a human will have to decohere in the same state?
 
  • #10
Section V (the chapters on relativistic quantum processes) of Breuer's "The Theory of Open Quantum Systems" should cover this in some depth.

I haven't read section V (don't have any background in relativistiv QM since I almost exclusively work on solid state systems) but the rest of the book is very good.

You can get some idea about the contents by using the "look inside" feature on Amazon.
 
  • #11
Decoherence is a somewhat ambiguous term - MWI talks about decoherence, but decoherence can exist on its own as a separate interpretation/hypothesis.

By the way, in which frame of reference does the waveform collapse instataneously? (This is a problem for all "real" waveform interpretations).

I don't expect to convince you of anything (I've argued this topic too many times) but I'd like to acknowledge their are other possible interpretations.
 
  • #12
2 WaveJumper:

I believe there is a difference between the Many-Worlds interpretation and the current interpretation with the Decoherence (I would refer it is D)

In D the universe does not split: it is always linked together, even these links may be sometimes too weak to be detected. Also, if event X is too far away from the observer Y, then Y is not split at all - at least until it enters the time-like cone from the event X.

If right now someone opens a box in the Andromeda galaxy then you are not decoherenced with it for at list million years because there is no way how you could know about it (this is a different between this interpretation and many-worlds, where the whole universe is split immediately)

But my point is that observers are decoherenced much much slower then the light cone associated with the events. I read somewhere (forgot the URL) that to be decoherenced you must absorb about 5-6 photons. So you you are on Pluto and I open the box on the Earth I doubt you get any information about it even after you enter the same light cone.
 
  • #13
Dmitry67 said:
2 WaveJumper:

I believe there is a difference between the Many-Worlds interpretation and the current interpretation with the Decoherence (I would refer it is D)

There would be a difference only if you are not interested(if you disregard) what happens to the other superpositional states that did not decohere in the state you observed.

Dimitry said:
In D the universe does not split: it is always linked together, even these links may be sometimes too weak to be detected. Also, if event X is too far away from the observer Y, then Y is not split at all - at least until it enters the time-like cone from the event X.

"Far too away" is not a concept that has any meaning with regard to quantum entanglement. There is simply no "far too away". If the universe does not split, you have to explain what happens to the other observed superpositional states. Do you have a better explanation?


Dimitry said:
If right now someone opens a box in the Andromeda galaxy then you are not decoherenced with it for at list million years because there is no way how you could know about it (this is a different between this interpretation and many-worlds, where the whole universe is split immediately)


I believe that could only happen if you could completely isolate Andromeda galaxy from interacting with the other galaxies, so that entanglement could not take place. But if you could do that, Andromeda galaxy would practically disappear.

Dimitry said:
But my point is that observers are decoherenced much much slower then the light cone associated with the events. I read somewhere (forgot the URL) that to be decoherenced you must absorb about 5-6 photons. So you you are on Pluto and I open the box on the Earth I doubt you get any information about it even after you enter the same light cone.




From wiki:

"Since the system is entangled with its environment in some unknown way, description of the system by itself cannot be done without also referring to the environment (i.e. without also describing the state of the environment)."

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_decoherence

Entanglement propagates instantaneously, as the experiments show and one photon is enough for a system to decohere in a particular state.

From the viewpoint of entanglement, the environment(the whole universe) is infinitely small, if you want to picture it - quantum entanglement "thinks" the universe is less than 1mm in diameter.
 
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  • #14
shaun_o_kane said:
Decoherence is a somewhat ambiguous term - MWI talks about decoherence, but decoherence can exist on its own as a separate interpretation/hypothesis.

By the way, in which frame of reference does the waveform collapse instataneously? (This is a problem for all "real" waveform interpretations).

I don't expect to convince you of anything (I've argued this topic too many times) but I'd like to acknowledge their are other possible interpretations.



Is there such a concept as "a frame of reference" in QM? What would that be supposed to mean?
 
  • #15
Here is good description of Decoherence by Michio Kaku, professor of theoretical physics(one of the co-founders of String Theory, currently working on the TOE):

"" Today, there is still no universal consensus to the questions raised by Einstein back in the 1920s concerning the quantum theory’s outrageous paradoxes. But one idea is gradually catching on, and this is “decoherence.”

For example, perhaps the cat splits into two cats or two universes. In one universe, the cat is dead. In the other universe, the cat is alive. So, at each juncture in the history of the universe, it constantly splits into two. The key is that we have “decohered” from these other universes, and hence can no longer communicate with these parallel universes. Nobel Laureate Steve Weinberg compares this to listening to a radio in your living room. You can hear many, many stations on your radio, so you know that there are many invisible radio waves permeating your living room. But your radio is tuned to only one frequency, and it has decohered from all the others. The radio frequency you are hearing no longer interacts with all the other radio frequencies, and you hear only one sound.

Likewise, in your living are the wave functions of alternate universes. There are the wave functions of dinosaurs, pirates, aliens, exploding stars, etc. in your living room. But you cannot interact with these parallel universes. Your universe no longer vibrates in unison with them, and hence has decoupled from them. (So, perhaps in one universe Elvis is still alive, but you can no longer interact with that universe.)"


http://www.simplyeinstein.com/interviews.htm
 
  • #16
Michio Kaku is quite ideologically attached to the idea of alternate universes. The explanation below he gives seems to be MWI rather then a description of decoherence, it just seems to imply that he is of the impresssion that they are inextricably linked, although this is not the consensus on the subject. Decoherence can serve as its own interpetation however; I suggest reading Zurek's idea on quantum darwinism as an example of how to do this.
 

Related to Quantum Decoherence - how fast does it propagate?

What is quantum decoherence?

Quantum decoherence is a physical process in which a quantum system, such as a particle or atom, becomes entangled with its environment and loses its quantum properties, becoming more classical and behaving in a predictable way.

How fast does quantum decoherence propagate?

The speed at which quantum decoherence propagates depends on many factors, such as the size and complexity of the quantum system, the strength of interactions with its environment, and the type of measurements being made. In general, decoherence happens very quickly, often in a matter of nanoseconds.

Can quantum decoherence be controlled?

While it is not yet fully understood, there are some methods being explored to control quantum decoherence. One approach is to use quantum error correction codes, which can protect quantum states from being affected by environmental noise. Another approach is to carefully engineer the environment in which the quantum system exists to minimize the effects of decoherence.

What are the consequences of quantum decoherence?

The consequences of quantum decoherence are significant for quantum computing and quantum information processing. Decoherence can cause errors in quantum computations and make it difficult to maintain fragile quantum states for long periods of time. It also limits the size and complexity of quantum systems that can be reliably controlled.

How is quantum decoherence being studied?

Quantum decoherence is a subject of intense study in both theoretical and experimental physics. Researchers use a variety of tools and techniques, such as quantum simulators and quantum computers, to study the effects of decoherence on different types of quantum systems. Additionally, techniques from other fields, such as condensed matter physics and quantum optics, are being used to better understand the phenomenon of decoherence.

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