Varon
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I think all the confusion and arguments of what is measurement in quantum mechanics can be boiled down to what really is a wave function. My head is spinning for a week thinking all about it and the following organize my thought about it. Correct me if I'm wrong and where I'm wrong in the categorization of the differences between the meaning of wave function.
1. Does the wave function represent the properties of the system? (Copenhagen)
2. Is a wave function only a tool to calculate probabilities and nothing more? (Statistical Interp)
3. Does wave function represent the system itself? (Objective Collapse)
4. Is a wave function a reservoir of the system/objects itself (Many Worlds Interpretation)
5. Is a wave function only an informational configuation space with a new force pushing the real object? (Bohmian Mechanics)
6. what else? (pls. add more)
Is the above categorization accurate? Pls. correct it if any part wrong. I want to understand the distinctions of the differences.
Instead asking people here whether position properties exist in principle before measurements, I think it is more accurate to ask them which of the above they believe.
For now the most popular is Copenhagen and Statistical Interpretation as it comprise orthodox QM. So let's focus on it. Can't experiments be done to distinguish whether the wave function is only a tool to calculate probabilities or whether wave function represent the properties of the object (here position property doesn't exist before measurement)?
Bohr, Heisenberg, Born, Wheeler believe that the wave function represent the properties of the system itself and measurement involve observers to collapse it.
While Einstein, Schroedinger believe it is just tool to calculate probabilities.
In this forum, Neumaeir is of the latter group. While I think Fra is of the former. Tom.stoer is agnostic or doesn't know.
Now I guess DrChinese who believes the object exists between measurement believes the wave function is just a tool to calculate probabilities and nothing more? But if he believes the wave function represent the properties of the system, then between measurement, it is just a ray in Hilbert Space, it has not yet collapsed to any Eigenvectors. So how can position properties even exist while the ray is not yet collapsed? (DrChinese?? Pls. elaborate).
How about you, what do you think is a wave function?
Very important. Is it correct to assume that if the wave function really represent the properties of the system. Properties like position, momentum don't exist in principle between measurements because the system is a ray in Hilbert space and not yet collapsed?
Speaking of Hilbert Space. For those who believe the wave function is just a calculation tool, then the Hilbert space is nothing more than information table. But for those who believe the wave function represent the properties of the object, then the Hilbert Space is more than probability space, the ray is the object itself! (right?)
In this message. I'm not looking for answers of what is the right interpretation. Because I know we don't know. I just want to understand the distinctions amonst them and whether I understand it right the different ideas of different people of the wave function and the distinctions. Specifically I want to know whether in the interpretation where the wave function represent the properties of the object (Bohr Copenhagen). Property like position doesn't exist in between measurement because it is just a ray in Hilbert space and not yet collapsed. Right?
1. Does the wave function represent the properties of the system? (Copenhagen)
2. Is a wave function only a tool to calculate probabilities and nothing more? (Statistical Interp)
3. Does wave function represent the system itself? (Objective Collapse)
4. Is a wave function a reservoir of the system/objects itself (Many Worlds Interpretation)
5. Is a wave function only an informational configuation space with a new force pushing the real object? (Bohmian Mechanics)
6. what else? (pls. add more)
Is the above categorization accurate? Pls. correct it if any part wrong. I want to understand the distinctions of the differences.
Instead asking people here whether position properties exist in principle before measurements, I think it is more accurate to ask them which of the above they believe.
For now the most popular is Copenhagen and Statistical Interpretation as it comprise orthodox QM. So let's focus on it. Can't experiments be done to distinguish whether the wave function is only a tool to calculate probabilities or whether wave function represent the properties of the object (here position property doesn't exist before measurement)?
Bohr, Heisenberg, Born, Wheeler believe that the wave function represent the properties of the system itself and measurement involve observers to collapse it.
While Einstein, Schroedinger believe it is just tool to calculate probabilities.
In this forum, Neumaeir is of the latter group. While I think Fra is of the former. Tom.stoer is agnostic or doesn't know.
Now I guess DrChinese who believes the object exists between measurement believes the wave function is just a tool to calculate probabilities and nothing more? But if he believes the wave function represent the properties of the system, then between measurement, it is just a ray in Hilbert Space, it has not yet collapsed to any Eigenvectors. So how can position properties even exist while the ray is not yet collapsed? (DrChinese?? Pls. elaborate).
How about you, what do you think is a wave function?
Very important. Is it correct to assume that if the wave function really represent the properties of the system. Properties like position, momentum don't exist in principle between measurements because the system is a ray in Hilbert space and not yet collapsed?
Speaking of Hilbert Space. For those who believe the wave function is just a calculation tool, then the Hilbert space is nothing more than information table. But for those who believe the wave function represent the properties of the object, then the Hilbert Space is more than probability space, the ray is the object itself! (right?)
In this message. I'm not looking for answers of what is the right interpretation. Because I know we don't know. I just want to understand the distinctions amonst them and whether I understand it right the different ideas of different people of the wave function and the distinctions. Specifically I want to know whether in the interpretation where the wave function represent the properties of the object (Bohr Copenhagen). Property like position doesn't exist in between measurement because it is just a ray in Hilbert space and not yet collapsed. Right?