Understanding Quantum Theory and Physics: Explained in Simple Terms

In summary: Anyway, sorry for the confusion. I'm sure you get it now!In summary,-There is no quantum field theory, just quantum field operators-A quantum wave function is the ordinary distribution function of a particle in classical quantum theory-A quantum field, in quantum field theory, is the combination of creation and annihilation operators of that particle which represents that particle.
  • #1
redhedkangaro
45
0
Ok, I am not the best man at math but would like to understand the principles behind these sciences. However these terms are really messing me up. Please someone out there help.

1.) Is there a difference between Quantum theory and Quantum Physics

2.) What is the difference between Quantum Field Theory and Unified Field Theory

3.) How do Unified Field Theory and String Theory fit together.

I will love whoever responds to this with great answers. Thanks for your time and help. My mind is jumbled and I would love to get this slipknot lose.
 
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  • #2
Welcome to PF!

Hi redhedkangaro ! Welcome to PF! :smile:
redhedkangaro said:
1.) Is there a difference between Quantum theory and Quantum Physics

Same thing.

And Quantum Field Theory is a particular mathematical treatment of them.
2.) What is the difference between Quantum Field Theory and Unified Field Theory

There are Quantum Field Theories for different forces, or combinations of forces.

Unified Field Theory (when it's discovered! :rolleyes:) will be a Quantum Field Theory for all forces, including gravity.
3.) How do Unified Field Theory and String Theory fit together.

String Theory is a particular mathematical treatment of Quantum Physics.

The principal similarity between Unified Field Theory and String Theory is that nobody's got either of them to work yet. :biggrin:
 
  • #3
Awesome thanks a bunch but as for my 3rd question I mean do these two theories interacti with each other. I mean I am seeing parts from books saying that string theory is a candadite for Unified Field theory, but how does that work if it has do do with strings rather than the field where the particles are created.
 
  • #4
"3.) How do Unified Field Theory and String Theory fit together."
String theory is a theory to unify the 3 theories describing the 3 forces


"how does that work if it has do do with strings rather than the field where the particles are created."

Its not about the field that the particles are created, its about what each and every single particle in existence is made of. The strings are the particles.

As i understand it, and very basically, with String theory there has been some success calculating the atomic, electromagnetic and gravity forces with the same formula.

String theory is saying that all the fundamental particles are made from vibrating strings and as such since they are all the same in a way, calculations can be made tying them all together.

This apparently works by seeing that every fundamental particles is made from a variety of pure energy strings, which are vibating forms of energy that vibrate uniquely through a series of extra dimensions that exist in every point of space.

It just needs a little something to make it all work perfectly, problem is no one yet knows what that little something is.

anyway, that's it very basically, hope that helps
 
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  • #5
Hi redhedkangaro! Thanks for your PM:
Thanks for helping me with my question online you gave me a very good understanding. I have question though I am still confused about. As we know the Quantum field is the field where all the fundamental forces and particles of nature arise, but do strings arise from this field as well.

No, there is no Quantum field …

Quantum field theory is the mathematical method that represents every particle by a combination of creation and annihilation operators of that particle … that combination is the "field" for that particle.

In other words, "field" (in this context) is not the name for the background through which particles move (it is not like an electromagnetic field, for example), it is the name for the particles themselves.

"string" similarly is the name for a particle (in a different mathematical treatment). :smile:
I mean if people say that all forces and particles are really vibrating strings then does that still mean that these strings too arise from a unified field of intelligence?

I'm not sure that people do use the word "really" … string theory is a mathematical theory, and i don't think it's relevant to the mathematics whether particles "really" are this or that.

And sorry, I have no idea what you mean by "a unified field of intelligence". :redface:
 
  • #6
Hi redhedkangaro! Thanks for your PM. :smile:

(why do you keep pm'ing? :confused: i do get email notifications of any new post in any thread I've contributed to … so it's much easier if you just reply on the thread :wink:)
redhedkangaro said:
Ok sorry to bombard you. I think i get what your saying so is a quantum wave function considered the the quantum field based on what you said?

No …

A quantum wave function is the ordinary distribution function of a particle in "classical quantum" theory.

A quantum field, in quantum field theory, is the combination of creation and annihilation operators of that particle which represents that particle.

It looks almost exactly like the wave function, except of course that it's made of operators. :smile:
 
  • #7
Ok Sounds simple. Haha I am really just confused. I've read some books on quantum field theory and they seem to say different things. In one book ,a physicist said something like this, " blah blah quantum wave function (quantum field) blah blah" implying that it was the same thing. Another physicist said the quantum field is where all forces and particles are created. So my mind is jumbled. Maybe you can help clear things tim. What exactly are the operators of the Quantum Field?
 
  • #8
I also wanted to know if my understanding of this was right

Quantum Theory( the same as quantum mechanics and quantum physics) was combined with eisteins special relativity to produce a relativistic quantum theory. And the only successfull one is the quantum field theory. Once it is found out how gravity fits in then quantum field theory will become a uinified fied theory. Am I correct?
 
  • #9
redhedkangaro said:
… What exactly are the operators of the Quantum Field?

A creation operator for, say, an electron is the operator which adds an electron of a particular state (state means all defining things such as spin, momentum, orbtial angular momentum, etc) to whatever is already there.

So there's a different operator for each state.

Similarly, an annihilation operator removes one electron of a particular state from what is already there.

If C and A are creation and annihilation operators, then CA - AC is a number (strictly, a multiple of the identity operator), wchh is how th fields (which are operators) get turned into probability distributions (which are numbers). :wink:

Since you're interested, try one of the free books on Quantum Field Theory listed and linked at http://freescience.info/Physics.php?id=95 :smile:
Quantum Theory( the same as quantum mechanics and quantum physics) was combined with eisteins special relativity to produce a relativistic quantum theory. And the only successfull one is the quantum field theory.

Yes … as Weinberg, for example, points out, special relativity (and particularly the inability of space-like-separated events to affect each other) plus the "cluster decomposition principle" imply a quantum field theory.
Once it is found out how gravity fits in then quantum field theory will become a uinified fied theory. Am I correct?

I think so. :smile:
 
  • #10
Ok, and these probability waves then become actual locations for things?
 
  • #11
redhedkangaro said:
Ok, and these probability waves then become actual locations for things?

uhh? how can a probability be a location? :confused:

probability means what it says
 
  • #12
Haha sorry. dumb question anyway. Do you know what these particles have to do with space and time. In other words, is this "Quantum Field" within space and time. And thanks for the link to the books
 
  • #13
Also from my understanding now, the intereactions of particles create these fields, which inturn give rise to other types of particles and forces in nature, or am I still lost?
 
  • #14
Just got up … :zzz:

Good morning! :smile:
redhedkangaro said:
Do you know what these particles have to do with space and time … is this "Quantum Field" within space and time

erm … as I said before, there is no Quantum field …

there is a field for each particle …

particles exist within space and time (where else could they be? :confused:)
redhedkangaro said:
Also from my understanding now, the intereactions of particles create these fields, which inturn give rise to other types of particles and forces in nature, or am I still lost?

Particles and forces are fields (in Quantum field theory).

And fields interact (it's what fields do! :wink:)
 
  • #15
Tim you are seriously the man.

Cool and in string theory these particles or strings, are no longer point like objects but strings which exists from 10-26 dimensions of space time.

So these forces and particles are fields themselves. The thing that's hard for me to grasp is that i can't imagine these particles moving without having some sort of substance to move in. Do these particles move throughout some sort of thing like ether? or...

Once again tim your the man. Thanks major props. :D
 
  • #16
redhedkangaro said:
The thing that's hard for me to grasp is that i can't imagine these particles moving without having some sort of substance to move in. Do these particles move throughout some sort of thing like ether? or...

Particles, and their fields, exist within space and time …

that is what particles move in …

why does there have to be a "substance"? …

why are you not happy to imagine empty space with particles moving through it? :confused:
 
  • #17
haha youre right its just kinda hard for me to imagine. I've been studying light an this ether like substance so i must still be on that train of thought. So its time and space that these particles move through. ok makes sense.
What about strings. They vibrate in space and time only if there are different dimmensions of space and time right?

And I know I am still on this idea of a field, sorry :(
there is no field, but these forces and particles make these fields

dont strings do the same?
 
  • #18
redhedkangaro said:
… What about strings. They vibrate in space and time only if there are different dimmensions of space and time right?

I'm not sure whether that's physics (ie, reality) or mathematics …

you could try a four-dimensional string theory (3 space and 1 time), but it wouldn't produce all the known particles and forces …

we need about 10 spacetime dimensions for it to work.
And I know I am still on this idea of a field, sorry :(
there is no field, but these forces and particles make these fields

dont strings do the same?

hmm … see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/String_field_theory and http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Relationship_between_string_theory_and_quantum_field_theory :smile:
 
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  • #19
Ok haha I am sorry, see math is not my thing but i think the principles behind what quantum physics talks about is very interesting.

Let me see if I've finally understood:

Quantum Field theory says that fundamental particles and forces interact with each other, but they are actuall field like and these fields interact.

So these particles and forces are not created from a field, but are the ones responsible for the interactions of the fields

String theory says that the particles and forces of nautre are not point like but they are strings which according to string field theory create fields which interact.Am I correct?
My next question is where do these particles and forces come from? Are they jjust fundamental in themselves?
 
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  • #20
Please don't hate me for asking so many questions :(

The strings in string theory do they vibrate within or throughout space and time?
This works if there is more than one dimension

Also is this statement correct:

String field theory can be understood as a quantum field theory with infinitely many fields which are unified into one master "string field".
 
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  • #21
redhedkangaro said:
Let me see if I've finally understood:

Quantum Field theory says that fundamental particles and forces interact with each other, but they are actuall field like and these fields interact.

So these particles and forces are not created from a field, but are the ones responsible for the interactions of the fields

String theory says that the particles and forces of nautre are not point like but they are strings which according to string field theory create fields which interact.

Am I correct?

Yes, I think that's right! :smile:
My next question is where do these particles and forces come from? Are they jjust fundamental in themselves?

Probably just fundamental …

but let's wait-and-see. :wink:
redhedkangaro said:
The strings in string theory do they vibrate within or throughout space and time?
This works if there is more than one dimension

mmm … I'm not really understanding the difference between "within" and "throughout". :confused:

A string vibrates wherever it can.
 
  • #22
Well i mean do the strings pervade space and time. Like if space and time were not there, would the strings still be vibrating.

Also the fields created by these particles, do these fields give rise to other particles as well?

Also where does the quantum wave function come into play in QFT or String Theory for that matter?

And also my final question is if this statement is correct:

String field theory can be understood as a quantum field theory with infinitely many fields which are unified into one master "string field".Also are you sure tim about youre statement of there being no quantum field. I talked to anothe physicist who said that there was indeed a quantum field where all particles are created.
 
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  • #23
redhedkangaro said:
Well i mean do the strings pervade space and time. Like if space and time were not there, would the strings still be vibrating.

Sorry, the question is meaningless … how can space and time "not be there" … and strings are in space and time (where else would they be? :confused:)
Also the fields created by these particles, do these fields give rise to other particles as well?

Two or more fields can interact, and "become" other fields.
Also where does the quantum wave function come into play in QFT or String Theory for that matter?

I think the wave function itself is an obsolete piece of "classical" quantum theory …

("wave function" certainly doesn't appear in the index of my copy of Weinberg's "Quantum Theory of Fields".)
And also my final question is if this statement is correct:

String field theory can be understood as a quantum field theory with infinitely many fields which are unified into one master "string field".

I think string theory aims to unify the many different types of field into a single type of field.
… a quantum field where all particles are created

Sorry, I don't understand what that means. :confused:
 
  • #24
Like instead of being fields interacting, there is one unified field at the basis of everything which is responsible for the creation of particles and forces.
 

1. What is quantum theory and physics?

Quantum theory and physics is a branch of science that studies the behavior and interactions of subatomic particles, such as atoms and photons. It explains phenomena that classical physics cannot, such as quantum entanglement and the wave-particle duality of light.

2. Why is quantum theory important?

Quantum theory is important because it has revolutionized our understanding of the microscopic world and has led to the development of many modern technologies, including transistors, lasers, and computers. It also plays a crucial role in other fields of science such as chemistry, biology, and materials science.

3. What are the key principles of quantum theory?

The key principles of quantum theory include the wave-particle duality, uncertainty principle, superposition, and entanglement. These principles describe the behavior of subatomic particles and their interactions with each other and the environment.

4. How does quantum theory differ from classical physics?

Quantum theory differs from classical physics in that it does not follow the laws of classical mechanics, which describe the behavior of macroscopic objects. Instead, quantum theory takes into account the probabilistic nature of subatomic particles and their interactions, and it describes them using mathematical equations.

5. Is quantum theory difficult to understand?

Quantum theory can be challenging to grasp because it contradicts our everyday experiences and intuition. However, with the help of visual aids and simplified explanations, it is possible to gain a basic understanding of the principles and concepts of quantum theory.

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