The Quantum field’s effect on Virtual Particles

Andrew Bone
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So many prominent physicists have argued that the universe may have formed within a vacuum from a virtual particle (either with no energy or without an opposite pair etc...). It’s the classical something from nothing argument.

However, could it not be argued that a “vacuum” within our universe still adheres to the laws of physics, as it still contains the various quantum fields within? If the previous statement is correct why do we then assume a true vacuum (or at least a different vacuum) existing beyond the event horizon of the universe operates in the same way (i.e. creating virtual particles).

Do we understand the quantium field's effect on virtual particles?
 
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Virtual particles are names given to terms in integrals that come up in Quantum Field Theoretic calculations. They are not actual particles measured in the lab via scattering experiments.

It's simply that these terms arrange themselves in such a way that there is a way of constructing them from a diagram (and ultimately this is due to the link between combinatorics and graphs). Some people like to then read these mnemonic graphs as a process to help think about the computation, but this isn't fundamental to field theory.
 
Not an expert in QM. AFAIK, Schrödinger's equation is quite different from the classical wave equation. The former is an equation for the dynamics of the state of a (quantum?) system, the latter is an equation for the dynamics of a (classical) degree of freedom. As a matter of fact, Schrödinger's equation is first order in time derivatives, while the classical wave equation is second order. But, AFAIK, Schrödinger's equation is a wave equation; only its interpretation makes it non-classical...
Insights auto threads is broken atm, so I'm manually creating these for new Insight articles. Towards the end of the first lecture for the Qiskit Global Summer School 2025, Foundations of Quantum Mechanics, Olivia Lanes (Global Lead, Content and Education IBM) stated... Source: https://www.physicsforums.com/insights/quantum-entanglement-is-a-kinematic-fact-not-a-dynamical-effect/ by @RUTA
Is it possible, and fruitful, to use certain conceptual and technical tools from effective field theory (coarse-graining/integrating-out, power-counting, matching, RG) to think about the relationship between the fundamental (quantum) and the emergent (classical), both to account for the quasi-autonomy of the classical level and to quantify residual quantum corrections? By “emergent,” I mean the following: after integrating out fast/irrelevant quantum degrees of freedom (high-energy modes...

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