Single-Particle Interference for BIG objects-what does it mean for a lay person?

In summary, a new member shared their fascination with the single particle interference experiment and was excited to learn that it also applies to macroscopic objects. They asked about the implications for the layperson and if it could mean we can exist in two places at once. Experts responded that there is a huge difference between quantum particles and classical objects and that such behaviors are not easily replicated in our everyday world. They also discussed the misconception perpetuated by the movie "What the Bleep Do We Know?" and emphasized the importance of experimental evidence in physics. Finally, they mentioned the experiment with a 1 mm oil droplet that showed classical physics can produce quantum-like effects.
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  • #37
Just to say that the model equation shown under reference 10 of the paper explains rather completely what happens.
 
  • #38
lalbatros said:
Just to say that the model equation shown under reference 10 of the paper explains rather completely what happens.

Hmm, there seems to be a typo in this equation. They speak of two terms on the RHS whereas there is a second 'equals'. So I guess the second '=' should be a '-' because the second term is described as viscous damping.
 
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  • #39
OOO said:
Hmm, there seems to be a typo in this equation. They speak of two terms on the RHS whereas there is a second 'equals'. So I guess the second '=' should be a '-' because the second term is described as viscous damping.

yes ;)
 
  • #40
mn4j said:
This is a beautiful experiment. Probably the most beautiful I've seen on the subject of interference patterns. I'm still reading it and it very well may be key to understanding what REALLY happens when photons, electrons, etc pass through slits, as opposed to "wavefunction collapse" hoopla. One thing to note as you read is the difference between the waves being discussed. Particularly:
- The droplet is always a particle
- It interacts with it's environment through the wave-like disturbance
- It's interaction with it's environment determines it's trajectory
- It's path through the slit determines where it ends up on the detector
- Not all paths have the same probability, with the probabilities matching the classical single slit diffraction pattern.
- knowing the path of the particle does not in any way affect the result!
- The particles are localized throughout the experiment

The results of this paper are frightfully close to Randell Mills' explanation of the double slit experiment in his CQM theory.

I think you are going too far. Probably, it is the consequence that you are allergic to the cats. Another thing to note as you read is the difference between the waves being discussed: it is the classical physics (see post #20). Therefore, it has nothing to do with photons and may provide the complementary understanding of the situation, but not “what REALLY happens when photons, electrons, etc pass through slits, as opposed to "wavefunction collapse" hoopla”.

I would be happy listen to the confirmation and the additional information from the alternative lab.

Regards, Dany.

P.S. I am not familiar with Randell Mills' writings but, again, the quoted page use notion of the photon. I guess the writer is not familiar with A.Einstein analysis Phys.Zeit. 10, 185, (1909).
 
  • #41
The "wavefunction collapse hoopla” is just an easy axiomatic shortcut.
It is actually an interaction process.
But the detailled analysis of this process is not necessarily useful for the overall understanding and it is certainly very complicated.
Just as it is meaningless to explain the human behaviour from atomic physics, it is also meaningless to explain the "hoopla" from detailled interactions. (but it has a meaning for the scientific principles and should studied and understood for itself)
 
  • #42
lalbatros said:
The "wavefunction collapse hoopla” is just an easy axiomatic shortcut.
It is actually an interaction process.
But the detailled analysis of this process is not necessarily useful for the overall understanding and it is certainly very complicated.
Just as it is meaningless to explain the human behaviour from atomic physics, it is also meaningless to explain the "hoopla" from detailled interactions. (but it has a meaning for the scientific principles and should studied and understood for itself)

Do you understand what you wrote? I am certainly not. And we certainly understand the spontaneous phase transitions. In addition, my dictionary says hoop-la: noise (e), balagan (h), tararam (r).

Regards, Dany.
 
  • #43
Anonym said:
Do you understand what you wrote? I am certainly not. And we certainly understand the spontaneous phase transitions. In addition, my dictionary says hoop-la: noise (e), balagan (h), tararam (r).

Regards, Dany.

(those two words don't come up in a physics conversation very often--hmmm)
 
  • #44
Anonym said:
Do you understand what you wrote? I am certainly not. And we certainly understand the spontaneous phase transitions. In addition, my dictionary says hoop-la: noise (e), balagan (h), tararam (r).

Regards, Dany.

I was just quoting you.
Here is the original sentense:

Therefore, it has nothing to do with photons and may provide the complementary understanding of the situation, but not “what REALLY happens when photons, electrons, etc pass through slits, as opposed to "wavefunction collapse" hoopla”.

What did you mean?

I understood the "hoopla" as a synonym for "magic trick".
In french, this word could be used by a magician.
In physics I think indeed that the wf collapse is a shortcut to avoid useless complications, therefore it is -for me- similar to a trick.
But a useful trick.
The rest of my prose was a digression about reductionism in science.

Btw, I don't see the link with phase transitions ...
 
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  • #45
lalbatros said:
I was just quoting you.
Here is the original sentense:

You are not quoting me. You are quoting my quotation of mn4j. Read his post #23, I consider he express himself clearly and that consistent with my dictionary translations to English/Hebrew/Russian.

lalbatros said:
In physics I think indeed that the wf collapse is a shortcut to avoid useless complications, therefore it is -for me- similar to a trick.
But a useful trick.

The wave packet collapse is not a trick; it is universally valid experimental fact that must be explained by the physical theory. Again I prefer to quote mn4j:” There exists a physical reality which underlies all scientific inquiry, without which science is meaningless.”

lalbatros said:
The rest of my prose was a digression about reductionism in science.

I don’t agree with you. I consider that we are pretty close to start investigation of the human brain using understanding of the quantum physics.

lalbatros said:
I don't see the link with phase transitions

We know the collapse is instant and discontinuous, so what else it may be?

Regards, Dany.
 
  • #46
Anonym said:
You are not quoting me. You are quoting my quotation of mn4j. Read his post #23, I consider he express himself clearly and that consistent with my dictionary translations to English/Hebrew/Russian.
Sorry, I focused on a thread within the thread!

Anonym said:
The wave packet collapse is not a trick; it is universally valid experimental fact that must be explained by the physical theory. Again I prefer to quote mn4j:” There exists a physical reality which underlies all scientific inquiry, without which science is meaningless.”
This is of course subject to discussion.
I also agree that it is experimentally validated.
But experience does not contradict the hypothesis that the collapse is the result of an interaction with the usual laws of physics. This is actually the point of view developped by Landau & Lifchitz in the introductory chapter 7 of "Quantum mechanics".
I really do think that the "measurement postulate" is a useful intellectual shortcut that avoid long and useless development. By useless I mean that they are generally useless, but of course they are not useless if the fundamentals of QM are under study.
A physician does not need genetics to treat a flu and similarly there is -usually- no need to go further than the "measurement postulate" for example when interpreting lab mesurements.

Anonym said:
I don’t agree with you. I consider that we are pretty close to start investigation of the human brain using understanding of the quantum physics.
Here we really disagree.
Quantum physics will never be of any utility to understand the human brain.
Of course, QP explains chemistry -in principle-, and in this sense QM is needed just as it is needed for any physics as soon as the quantum level is involved.
I don't know exactly what you meant by "using QP to understand the brain".
If you were thinking to the measurement postulate, then you are back on old-fashion misconception, that can be traced back to the hippie movement.
If you are thinking to a reductionist approach to the understanding of the brain, then I think it is a loss of time. But science is a risky activity ...

Anonym said:
We know the collapse is instant and discontinuous, so what else it may be?
Here there must be a misunderstanding with vocabulary.
"Phase transition" refers to a precise concept in thermodynamics and statistical physics.
But "phase transition" doesn't specifically mean something in QP.

I hope this sets us back on track,

L
 
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  • #47
"Describing" a certain behavior of the universe involves citing the tools needed to be able to predict the directly measurable parameters of the outcome of experiments involving that behavior.

"Explaining" a behavior of the universe involves showing how that behavior is a result of certain simpler behavior(s) of the universe. It is reductionism.

"Understanding" a behavior of the universe is an ambiguous term that can sometimes mean "knowing the description" and other times mean "knowing the explanation".

QM explains classical mechanics. It also happens to reveal that classical mechanics is not correct--QM is more precise, and profoundly so in experiments involving very low energy levels. It is highly doubtful we will find that classical mechanics can explain QM!

When a person truly understands the description of, for example, the double slit experiment, then that person will see that QM is simply not compatible with classical mechanics. This is because QM is not compatible with certain axioms of Newtonian mechanics, like those having to do with conservation of energy (one way to look at QM is that it allows violations of conservation of energy while the experiment has not yet been observed) and/or those axioms having to do with causality working only in absolute and continuous time and space. It is unfortunate that popularized "descriptions" of the double-slit experiment, and others, as well as popularized "descriptions" of special relativity experiments like the twin paradox, are actually mere Newtonian shadows of the experiments that clearly show that incompatibility. It is no wonder there are so many people that do not realize that QM and SR are simply incompatible with Newtonian mechanics. It leads to many people trying to explain QM (and SR) with Newtonian terms. That's like trying to explain the workings of the human spleen in terms of sociology--one is more fundamental than the other (society is based upon people, which are each based upon their organs), and you can't use the other to explain the one.

We have the description of QM but not the explanation. Terms like superposition, wavefunction collapse, multiple universes, Copenhagen interpretation, hidden variables are most certainly not explanations. Each is either just a word without meaning, a word that means "don't try to explain", or an explanation of only a small part of QM.

Now I'd like to introduce you all to what I believe may be the beginnings of an explanation of superposition and non-locality. I do ask that the reader hesitate to criticize until he is familiar with why superposition and non-locality are totally incompatible with classical mechanics. Here is the explanation:

The laws of physics must be obeyed in all inertial reference frames. In fact, the laws of physics must be obeyed in an inertial reference frame whether there happens to be an observer in a reference frame, or not. Therefore the laws of physics are always obeyed in all inertial reference frames all the time.

This includes reference frames traveling at c. In an inertial reference frame traveling at c, the entire universe is flattened perpendicular to the direction of travel, and an observer in that frame measures zero time to travel from the point of departure to the point of arrival--because the distance between those points is zero.

Now imagine a reference frame traveling at c from one atom to another atom. In that reference frame, the two atoms occupy the same point in space. Note that the two atoms also are superimposed in a reference frame traveling at c from the destination to the source.

Now imagine that an electron orbital on one of those atoms is excited, and thus there is an opportunity for energy to be transferred to an orbital in the other atom. Since there is no distance between the two atoms in these various reference frames traveling at c, this transfer of energy takes zero time, and therefore is not subject to causality.

There are, however, restrictions on how the energy can be transferred. For one thing, the exclusion principle applies. For another, the phase of the orbitals must be right to allow the energy to transfer (just as the phase in a radio transmitting antenna and a radio receiving antenna must be right to allow a radio photon to be transferred).

Now remember that the laws of physics must be obeyed in all reference frames that we can find that travel from the source to the destination as well as those reference frames that travel from the destination back to the source. So energy will travel only when the phase of the two orbitals is correct in all of those reference frames. An analysis reveals that the energy will transfer according to basic wave mechanics, but without causality (because there is no time in these reference frames traveling at c).
 
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  • #48
Viva-Diva said:
Dear people...thanks for all your replies..but did you forget that I am a layperson.

You forget that you ask to explain the content of the paper published in PRL, October 2006. It is the frontier of the modern physics.

lalbatros said:
Sorry, I focused on a thread within the thread!

The OP asks about http://www.physorg.com/news78650511.html. The paper has nothing to do with QM, collapse, theory of measurements, human brain, etc.

The paper claim the experimental demonstration the wave mechanical behavior of the physical system described by the Newtonian mechanics only, no fields relevant (EM and/or gravitation). Apparently, it is outstanding achievement; therefore, first of all, it should be verified and confirmed.

Regards, Dany.
 
  • #49
Anonym,

I don't see why you mention the brain in this context.
I used the brain myself just to illustrate that reductionism can be useless, a fact that is generally accepted, specially by engineers (I am one).
The comparison with the quantum measurement postulate is obvious: it is in principle possible to reduce the QM measurement postulate to the solution of the evolution equation including the interaction with the measurement device. But this would not provide any insight in the interpretation of anything practical except the foundations of QM.

For the rest, I do think this paper is somewhat related to the theory of measurement.
In this model system, particles are droplets and wave functions are capillary waves, and measuring particles can reveal statistically an interference pattern of the waves. The correspondence between QM and this model is clear ... and it is interresting to see what the limits of this correspondence are. That's why I pushed the question about entanglement.

I also think the experimental verification is useless.
Firstly because it makes little doubt it will be verified without much problems.
Secondly because what happens is pretty much easy to understand and even to modelize.
And third because the particular realisation in of little importance.
What really matters is that a set of deterministic equations (droplet+waves motion and interaction) can lead to a behaviour more or less similar to the observations in QM.
Therefore, it is more important to understand this system and other similar systems theoretically and to identifiy clearly the eventual limitations of the comparison with QM.
 
  • #50
lalbatros said:
Anonym,I don't see why you mention the brain in this context.
I used the brain myself just to illustrate that reductionism can be useless, a fact that is generally accepted, specially by engineers (I am one).

That means that there is no way I can communicate with you. See my post #157 in “cat in a box paradox” session. Even worse, for me using Zz metaphor you are sitting on a cow on Alpha Centauri.

I don’t understand you. Imagine outsider that volunteer to perform your everyday professional work and think how he looks in your eyes. In addition, the foundations of physics are generally considered the most difficult area of the scientific research. If you are an engineer, be practical. Sell your absurd ideas to Hollywood.

Regards, Dany.
 
  • #51
Ok Anonym, as I can see you are more interrested in sociology than in physics.
 
  • #52
Anonym said:
You forget that you ask to explain the content of the paper published in PRL, October 2006. It is the frontier of the modern physics.
.


Wow that makes me happy as I fished out that paper even though I am not a science person. Did you know about this paper already before?
 
  • #53
lalbatros said:
Ok Anonym, as I can see you are more interrested in sociology than in physics.

Don't worry, our beloved friend likes to pretend that he's some sort of bhuddistic monk or something. But mumbling incoherently is not the same as knowing.
 
  • #54
Viva-Diva said:
Wow that makes me happy as I fished out that paper even though I am not a science person. Did you know about this paper already before?

No. Thank you. I consider the paper masterpiece. If it is correct, it is Nobel Prize level.

Regards, Dany.
 
  • #55
Wow! I feel so happy!

(But then if it is on Nobel Prize value...why weren't you aware of it? Being a scientist, don't you keep track of latest litrature? :-p)
 
  • #56
Viva-Diva said:
why weren't you aware of it? Being a scientist, don't you keep track of latest litrature?

I try. My research interests now in the relativistic QM and the measurement theory (information). I missed it. A posteriori it is obvious that we should look on fluids first of all. They describe also something totally unexpected and I should return to study hydrodynamics. However, it is better late than never.

Regards, Dany.
 
  • #57
Anonym said:
I try. My research interests now in the relativistic QM and the measurement theory (information). I missed it. A posteriori it is obvious that we should look on fluids first of all. They describe also something totally unexpected and I should return to study hydrodynamics. However, it is better late than never.

I generally advise people to go back to the basics, and I apply that to myself too.
Practically this means for me a collection of reference books.
I specially like the Landau & Lifchitz series that I read several time in detail during my engineering hobby time.
Other books are Jackson, gravitation by MTW, Weinberg, ...

Twenty years ago I read the collection of papers in "Quantum theory and Measurement" edited by Wheeler.
I wonder how much this subject has evolved since then on the theoretical side.
The experimental side has confirmed QM in more and more details.

Great problems need great people or time ... unless one just understand there is no problem at all.
(Landau QM chap 7)
 
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  • #58
lalbatros said:
I specially like the Landau & Lifchitz series that I read several time in detail during my engineering hobby time.Other books are Jackson, gravitation by MTW, Weinberg, ...
Twenty years ago I read the collection of papers in "Quantum theory and Measurement" edited by Wheeler.

I remember, you already told me that few months ago.

lalbatros said:
This is actually the point of view developped by Landau & Lifchitz in the introductory chapter 7 of "Quantum mechanics".

Par.7. L.D. presented John von Neumann theory of measurements (on fingers as he usually liked to do). Eq. (7.1) is the original J. v. Neumann assumption and it is wrong. L.D. ignored that J. v. Neumann used the standard math method Reductio ad absurdum. It was further discussed in details by F.London and E.Bauer, W&Z, p.217.

By the way, L.D. didn’t write hydrodynamics. His student V.G. Levich wrote it. That book I should read again.

Regards, Dany.
 
  • #59
Can anyone help me with this? If so, please do. If you have a paper or text to point me to, that would be great. Here goes: When a double slit experiment with respect to single particle interference is conducted, and only one particle is emitted for the entire event, what is the observed result that suggests that a single particle has interfered with itself?
 
  • #60
LinJieFu said:
Can anyone help me with this? If so, please do. If you have a paper or text to point me to, that would be great. Here goes: When a double slit experiment with respect to single particle interference is conducted, and only one particle is emitted for the entire event, what is the observed result that suggests that a single particle has interfered with itself?

Welcome to PhysicsForums, LinJieFu!

Generally, you cannot conclude there is self-interference from a single observation. There will be a dispersion pattern over a sufficiently large number of events which indicates this result.
 

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