Title: The Hidden Worlds of Quantum Mechanics
1The Hidden Worlds of Quantum Mechanics
- Craig Callender
- Philosophy, UCSD
- ccallender_at_ucsd.edu
2Double Slit Experiment
3(No Transcript)
4What you would expect is
5But what actually happens is
- 1961, Jönsson, Zeitschrift für Physik 161 454
- 1974, P. Merli, G. Missiroli and G. Pozzi in
Bologna in 1974 - Hitachi (A Tonomura et al). 1989 Demonstration of
single-electron buildup of an interference
pattern Am. J. Phys. 57
6The Double Slit Experiment
7Actual images
Bologna 1974
Hitachi 1989
8(No Transcript)
9Structure of Physical Theories
- Stuff Newtonian corpuscles
- State (xi, pi)
- Dynamical law Hamiltons equations
- Stuff ?
- State wavefunction or vector ?gt
- Dynamical law Schrodingers equation
10Wave function (quantum state)
?(x)
x
11?2(x) gives the probability of finding the
particle at position x
Most probable location of particle
?2(x)
x
12where the observable is assumed to have a
discrete spectrum of eigenvalues, u are the
(normalized) eigenfunctions, and the coefficient
cn of the nth term gives the probability of the
nth eigenvalue via cn2.
13Schrodinger evolution
Schrodinger evolution
?i(x)
?f(x)
- Deterministic
- Unitary
- Linear
14Three Ingredients for Trouble
- Linear dynamical evolution
- Eigenstate-eigenvalue rule
- Determinate outcomes
15Linearity
- If the evolution takes Agt ?Bgt..
- And takes Cgt ? Dgt
- Then it takes the state
- Agt Cgt ? Bgt Dgt
16Eigenstate-eigenvalue link
- A system in the quantum state ?gt has the value a
for the observable  if and only if ?gt assigns
the probability 1 to a and the probability 0 to
all other possible values of Â. - Â ?gt a?gt
?(x)
x
17Measurement
- 1 readygtM?gtS ? upgtM?gtS
- 2 readygtM?gtS ? downgtM?gtS
- readygtM (a1?gtSa2?gtS)
-
- a1readygtM?gtSa2readygtM?gtS
- ? (a1upgtM?gtS a2downgtM?gtS)
18Schrödingers cat
- 1 cat readygtreadygtM?gtS ? cat deadgtupgtM?gtS
- 2 cat readygtreadygtM?gtS ? cat
alivegtdowngtM?gtS - cat readygtreadygtM (a1?gtS a2?gtS)
-
- a1cat readygtreadygtM?gtS a2cat
readygtreadygtM?gtS - ? (a1deadgtupgtM?gtS a2alivegtdowngtM?gtS
19Measurement Problem
- The quantum state is representationally complete,
i.e., the eigenstate-eigenvalue link holds - The quantum state always evolves according to a
linear laws of evolution, e.g., Schrodinger
equation. - Measurements yield definite values
- Contradiction!
20Schrodinger evolution
?f(x)
?i(x)
Final state is a probability distribution but in
the real world something actually happens!
non-Schrodinger evolution miracle collapse
?i(x)
?f(x)
21MP is Here to Stay
- Quantum field theory employs superpositions among
distinct macroscopic states - Theories on the horizon do too, e.g., superstring
theory, loop theory, etc. - So MP has to be solved
22The Standard Solution
- Copenhagen (Bohr, Heisenberg, Dirac, von Neumann,
) - Two types of evolution
- Unmeasured evolution
- Measurement evolution
- Quantum philosophy of realism about
macroscopic entities but anti-realism about
microscopic ones
23Unique?
- Rosenfeld quantum theory eminently possess this
character of uniqueness every feature of it has
been forced upon us as the only way to avoid the
ambiguities which would essentially affect any
attempt at an analysis in classical terms of
typical quantum phenomena
24Criticism
- It would seem that the theory is exclusively
concerned about "results of measurement", and has
nothing to say about anything else. What exactly
qualifies some physical systems to play the role
of "measurer"? Was the wavefunction of the world
waiting to jump for thousands of millions of
years until a single-celled living creature
appeared? Or did it have to wait a little longer,
for some better qualified system ... with a
Ph.D.? If the theory is to apply to anything but
highly idealized laboratory operations, are we
not obliged to admit that more or less
"measurement-like" processes are going on more or
less all the time, more or less everywhere.
25Solution Deny one of the premises
- The quantum state is representationally complete,
i.e., the eigenstate-eigenvalue link holds - The quantum state always evolves according to a
linear laws of evolution, e.g., Schrodinger
equation. - Measurements yield definite values
26Deny 1
- Bohm-like hidden variable theories
- De Broglie 1927
- Bohm 1952
- Bohm and Vigier
- Nelsons stochastic mechanics
- Bell 1987
- Goldstein, Durr and Zanghi 1991
27Deny 2
- Physically-specifiable Collapse theories
- Pearle 1989
- Pearle and Squires 1994
- Pearle 1996
- Ghiradhi, Rimini and Weber 1986
- Bell 1987
- Penrose
28Deny 3
- Many-world type theories
- Everett 1957
- deWitt
- Many minds
- Barbour
- Rovellis relational qm
29Bohmian Mechanics
- De Broglie 1927 David Bohm 1952
- The de Broglie-Bohm idea seems so natural and
simple, to resolve the wave-particle dilemma in
such a clear and ordinary way, that it is a great
mystery that it was so generally ignored. Bell,
1987.
30Bohmian Mechanics
- Basic idea Suppose that there are some particles
and that their velocities are determined by ?
In other words, ? is not the whole story there
are also particles.
31Bohmian mechanics
Schrodinger equation
Velocity equation
at time t0
If
at time t
then
32GRW
33- The world is described by two equations, the
Schrodinger equation and the velocity equation.
The latter is arguably the simplest first order
equation for the positions of particles
compatible with the Galilean and time reversal
invariance of the former. - Given any probability distribution for the
initial configuration, Bohmian mechanics defines
a probability distribution for the full
trajectory. Notice that the velocity equation is
simply v J/p, where J is the quantum probability
current and p is the quantum probability density.
It follows from the quantum continuity equation
that if the distribution of the configuration Q
is given by psi at some time (say the initial
time) this will be true at all times. - This deterministic theory of particles completely
accounts for all the phenomena of nonrelativistic
quantum mechanics, from interference effects to
spectral lines. Thus Bohmian mechanics provides
us with probabilities for complete
configurational histories that are consistent
with the quantum mechanical probabilities for
configurations, including the positions of
measuring devices.
34Many Bohmian Theories
- Deterministic alternatives to the velocity
equation that are empirically adequate - Indeterministic versions of velocity equation
- Spin as fundamental with position (Bohm, Schiller
and Tiomno 1955, Dewdney 1992, Holland and Vigier
1988, Bohm and Hiley 1993) - Bell-Bub-Vink dynamics discrete, indeterministic
- Bub modal interpretation
35Ghirardi, Rimini Weber 1986
- Basic Idea The Schrodinger equation is not quite
right. The wavefunction ?(r1,r2, ..., t) usually
evolves according to the Schrodinger equation,
but every now and then, at random, ? is
multiplied (hit) by a gaussian function (and
then normalized). How often the state is likely
to be hit by a gaussian is proportional to how
many particles there are in the system. - The effect of this multiplication is to collapse
the state to a more localized one. Thus, systems
with large N turn out to be overwhelmingly likely
to collapse, and systems with small N turn out to
be unlikely to collapse.
36GRW
?(x)
x
Cat Alive
Cat Dead
1/?2(?C(r1,r2, ...rN...rM, t)??S(r1))
(?C(r1,r2, ...rN...rM, t)?? S(r1))
37Then the Gaussian hits
?(x)
j(x) K exp (-x - ri2/2a2)
? j(x, ri)?(...,t)/ Ri(x).
x
Cat Alive
a10-5cm, jump time T1016s For N 1023,
collapse happens around 10-7s, compared to
observation time 10-2s
38Many GRWs
- Ghirardi emphasizes the importance of specifying
what he calls the physical reality of what
exists out there.'' - Mass density interpretation for the simple GRW
theory described here can be identified with the
mass weighted sum, over all particles, of the
one-particle densities arising from integrating
over the coordinates of all but one of the
particles. -
- Hit interpretation Bell p 205, that the
space-time points (x,t) at which the hits are
centered (which are determined by the wave
function trajectory) should themselves serve as
the local beables of the theory. These are the
mathematical counterparts in the theory to real
events at definite places and times in the real
world (as distinct from the many purely
mathematical constructions that occur in the
working out of physical theories, as distinct
from things which may be real but not localized,
and as distinct from the observables' of other
formulations of quantum mechanics, for which we
have no use here.) A piece of matter then is a
galaxy of such events.' - SL v CSL
39 Bohm GRW Everett
Deterministic? Yes No Yes
Time reversal invariant? Yes No Yes
Monistic? No Yes Yes
Particles? Yes No No
Is spin real? No Yes Yes
Preferred foliation? Yes Yes Maybe not
40- There is something wrong with all of these
post-Copenhagen interpretationsthey dont offer
new predictions - But
- Why should when the theory is developed be
important? - De Broglie 1927
- GRW will differ from Copenhagen Bohm would if
Copenhagen were clear plus, one never knows
41Underdetermination of Theory by Evidence
THEORY1
THEORY2
Observable evidence
THEORY3
THEORY4
42- Duhem
- Shall we ever dare to assert that no other
hypothesis is imaginable? Light may be a swarm
of projectiles, or it may be a vibratory motion
whose waves are propagated in a medium is it
forbidden to be anything else at all? - (1914)
43Experimenta Crucis?
- Bohm v Copenhagen
- Times of arrival, etc.
- Conroversial
- Bohm v Everett
- in principle underdetermination
- Laudan and Leplin 1991
- GRW v Bohm (or Copenhagen)
- Localizations ? greater KE ? heating
- Resistance of a superconductor different (Gallis
Flemming Rae Rimini) - One mole of H one atom excited/sec
- hope of reaching a crucial testextremely dim
44Theoria crucis?
- Solving the measurement problem seems to involve
adding some new physics - The new physics may or may not be experimentally
detectable in the future - But it might be crucial to new theories, e.g.,
Bohmian quantum gravity, GRWs energy
contribution, and so on.
45Philosophers are any real theories
under-determined?
- Our evidence is equally compatible with T (our
best physical theory) and T (we and our
apparently T-governed world is a computer
simulation) - But T is just skepticism, not a real physical
theory
46Philosophers underdetermination too local to be
interesting?
The evidence equally supports T (newtonian
mechanics plus gravitational theory plus universe
is at rest in absolute space) and T (same, but
universe moving 5mph wrt absolute space)
5mph
47How should we react in QM case?
48Lesson of Quantum Mechanics Bad News
- GRW, Bohm, Everett, etc. show that there is
underdetermination by genuine scientific
theories, contrary to what some philosophers
suggest. - Furthermore, its hardly too local to care
aboutit involves the central terms of our most
fundamental theory - Real life is stranger than fiction or philosophy
49Good news
- Further testing may narrow down the available
possibilities - Further theorizing may narrow down the
possibilities - The UT doesnt seem to be of the kind that would
challenge realist interpretations of most
science. - First, one might appeal to non-observable facts,
e.g., simplicity - Second, the underdetermination is not entirely
general - Third, there are still levels that are not
under-determined wrt the evidence, e.g., energy
nuclear levels (Cordero 2002), scattering, etc. - Nevertheless, were stuck with a bewildering
amount of underdetermination, like it or notso
its best to learn to like it.