Closed loophole confirms the unreality of the quantum world (2018)(quantamagazine.org) |
Closed loophole confirms the unreality of the quantum world (2018)(quantamagazine.org) |
I'm not sure in what sense it is a reality. On observable scale the reality seems to be more tied to particles, at least in our human understanding. Wave-particle duality concept to me seems just as hard to reconcile as the concept of irrationality or infinity.
These concepts work well to power our present explanation of the world around, yet can't naturally root in human brain (not mine at least).
Why is this happening? That's the question worth 1000 Nobel prizes.
Of course, Heisenberg's uncertainty principle is a mathematical description of observed behaviour so one could rightly argue that it doesn't really explain anything - it merely describes things.
"Number of particles" is an observable like position, momentum, spin, etc. It is a quantum property which may or may not commute with other properties, and occupies the same conceptual space.
OTOH it does not imply that a photon is a "particle" in the same sense a breadcrumb is, with a well-defined diameter, shape, or borders. It is a portion of energy of electromagnetic field that was sufficient to yank an election from a photo element's crystallic grid.
If I understand her correctly, she proposes that the reason waves behave like particles is because they transfer energy essentially every zero-crossing : for example a photon is just one half of a wavelength of light.
She has a much more interesting explanation of what i am very poorly tryingto spit out here on youtube. Bear with, because honestly she is a whackadoo but she is a smart whackadoo.
Lemme know if you want a link to the video
It's probably a good bet that we are going to discover that to rectify the complexities of QM, there is some assertion most people have fundamentally accepted and is quite uncomfortable to let go but is necessary to simplify the equations. I can't really guess what it's going to be though.
[edited for clarity]
To say it is "nothing but conjecture" is incredibly condescendingly dismissive and ignorant of the history of its evolution.
Would have to look for the link, and don't know if that was ever rejected, but.. maybe?
By extension, spooky action may be ignoring time entirely.
The concepts like locality and physical object have become more specific over time.
Before QM, principle of locality in physics matched the common sense of locality in every sense. Object is directly influenced only by its immediate surroundings. Objects have locations. Field must mediate the action over distance.
After QM was developed, principle of locality in physics became more refined. Quantum states don't have location in space and time. They are not 'physical objects' themselves. Quantum states is everywhere in time and space where objects sharing that state are, and everything correlates perfectly over time and space.
Before QM, something like quantum-state would have been called a non-local thing. In current more refined meaning it's not breaking locality. Non-local instant quantum state 'hovering over wast distances of space and time' is OK as long as causality is local and moves at the speed of light.
Plancks energy equation should be
E=htf
h should be in the units of Joule as opposed to Joule second.
This formula reveals the true nature of the photon: its not a fundamental particle. What we regard as a photon today is the energy of 1 seconds worth of light at some frequency f.
Every wavelength of light contains the same energy, h, regardless of frequency.
When you realize plancks constant should be in Joules you will shortly realize that the fine structure constant actually has units of seconds.
Another neat thing is that light has mass: h/c^2 (ridiculously small). If it has mass then it should have net charge as well. This could explain why light curves without needing general relativity.
Coulombs law using permeability of free space instead of permittivity reveals that coulombs law is a long form of expressing E=mc^2
F * d = muc^2 q1q2/d
E = (h2alpha/e^2c)(q1*q2/d)c^2
Edit: formatting
They're all short reads. There's one of them that goes into the history of E=hf and how Planck actually originally had E=htf but Boltzmann criticized him for it
and my favorite the Delayed-choice quantum eraser[1].
[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wheeler%27s_delayed-choice_exp...
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delayed-choice_quantum_eraser
What would be needed to make physicists search for such an explanation? Some kind of pattern in the "randomness"? Say, photons behave more like particles on Monday mornings?
They are at odds with what quantum mechanics predicts (and what we have observed).
On a semi-related note, I might be reading too much into your comment, but I very much dislike when people imply that scientists haven’t thought outside or the box or tried other non-mainstream theories. They try all the time, but fail because those theories often aren’t true. What we’re left with are the best extant theories, even if they’re obvious incomplete.
[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Local_hidden-variable_theory?w...
My point is that the notion of "measurement" or "wave function collapse" simply don't seem to explain anything. Instead they are just different words for what we observe. So yes, that is certainly useful but it also seems to be limiting.
A simple question would be: What is "measurement", i.e. what is the fundamental thing that forces a probability distribution to yield a concrete value? And why does it exist separately from said probability distribution?
Edit: to make things even clearer: I am not lamenting that there is no one working on mathematically consistent interpretations of QM. I know people are doing that and I know that this is difficult. Instead I am asking what would be a clearly visible limit of QM. Where would we, as a society, encounter a situation where we say: "We really need to explain the reasons behind QM or we won't get that problem here solved."
Correct theories are suppressed all the time by oligarchs. See the electric car.
This assumption that the best is chosen is part of the problem of the scientific institution - the assumption that corruption doesn’t play a major role in what is allowed through the gate keepers.
All classical theories and interpretations of QM already have indexical uncertainty (the randomness of what person you find yourself born as). MWI avoids adding any new kinds of entities not implied by the Schrodinger equation and effectively explains away quantum randomness by implying that it's the same thing as indexical uncertainty, instead of being a separate kind of randomness.
Also, the MWI idea of branching is no more satisfying or intuitive than the wave function collapse, which at least doesn't require an infinity of universes out of which some are much more probable than others.
Note also that there is only 1 of you in MWI, you just exist with different amplitudes in different states, but when interacting with another object, you become entangled with a single outcome and thus can no longer perceive the other states that other versions of you perceive. This is important, as otherwise physical quantities would not be properly conserved.
I'd say confirmation of a failed prediction by QM is what's needed.
what if randomness is an inherent property of nature?
However, when you measure the state of such a system after however many steps of perfectly deterministic interactions you want, you find the system takes only one of the many possible states predicted by the Schrodinger equation, with a probability that depends on the amplitude of that state.
It is this discrepancy between the deterministic nature of the quantum world and the classical world, but the probabilistic nature of the crossing between them, that people find disconcerting.
MWI even does away with this to solve extent, explaining it as a kind of observation bias: as a particle interacts with a very independent system, it loses its ability to interact with itself (decoherence), and so we get many versions of the system each interacting with a single version of the particle, which stimulates classical physics for each version. From the perspective of any particular version of this system it is random with which particular version of the particle it interacts, even though at the universal level there is no randomness.
The argument is: Planck's relation says that a photon's energy is in proportion to its frequency. But a higher-frequency photon oscillates more times per second. If you look at the energy of a single oscillation, you get a constant, regardless of frequency. This is remarkable and so we should reframe Planck's constant as the fundamental "energy per cycle."
The problem is that "energy of a single cycle" cannot be related to other measures of energy, e.g. the binding energy of an electron in the photoelectric effect. Basically it seems like unit sophistry.
Physicists have received Nobels for inventing particles to balance equations. Why isn't that sophistry? Maybe we just need to spend a few more billion dollars on a brand new particle accelerator to figure that out.
So, yes, it's possible there is some physics "beyond" the one we know, and yes in order to go beyond what we know we have to consider the possibility that some of the stuff that lay at the foundation of the current physics is wrong (or, correct up to an approximation). And many working physicists are well aware of that fact and they do consider all the options on the table.
The problem is, you have to find something to replace it and it has to work.
Thinking about all crazy things is great. "Temporarily" throwing away some assumptions can be a productive thinking tool. The Heisenberg principle (like many other things) can be both something you want to keep and use as a foundation for other explorations, and it can be something you question. The field is made up of many people, not everybody should be working on the same thing on the same assumption; I think "putting ideas at rest at this point" should be relegated to old theories that have been fully superseded, and even then they can be still useful: even Newtonian mechanics can still be quite useful even if we know it falls short.
> There are literally infinite ways to create equations that satisfy measurements.
There really aren't. You seem to be thinking of something like in the movie The Number 23. But we're talking about equations, not numbers. Take Newton's Second Law (f = m • a). What equation can you write that expresses that relationship that can't be simplified to f = m • a?
As for equations, notice that many equations in Physics have a constant which turns a proportion to an equation. This is where you have leeway in constructing more or less arbitrary equations based on the variables you think are important enough to observe.
Coming to your example, Newton's f = ma equation is really f/m proportional to a. The units are chosen carefully to make the constant 1. This works under the assumption that mass is constant and acceleration is measured measured from a non accelerating frame of reference with non relativistic speeds. So, yes there are several other ways to write that equation.
IIRC, in this context the mass m is considred as a proportionality coefficient. Such that the force is propotional to the acceleration.
Sure, rewriting this would fix the constant to 1, but this introduces a concept of specific force, force per unit-mass.
It's much more plausible that the uncomfortable human-centric thing we need to let go is the idea that our perceptions about macroscopic reality should be indicative of how things actually are.
Same with Schrödinger equation: it's very simple for one particle in an empty Universe, but things go more complicated when more particles are considered.
There is no guarantee that a different approach can replace QM and describe things in a simpler way. But I suspect that attempts to look for such approaches are not useless.
I'd love to see a derivation if it exists.
So, maybe it's time for another round. ;-)
EDIT: To stretch the metaphor a bit more. Maybe QFT is the analogous of the solar system described with epicycles.
Relativity tells us things get weird at high velocities, but our daily perception is basically correct. Quantum theory seems to suggest that solid, tangible reality isn't at all like our day-to-day experience. That's a pretty decent leap to ask of people.
I really think Sean Carroll's ideas involving MWI and emergent spacetime from hilbert space provides a great deal of clarity.
Saying "we don't know what we don't know" is both a tautology and completely useless. It's like my saying: "I believe that you committed a crime last week." You ask for more details about why I think that and what the crime was, and I reply "we just don't know." I hope you see how ludicrous that is.
Re-framing the whole system to be heliocentric allowed for the massive simplification of Kepler's Laws (and, not too much later, the further simplification of describing Kepler's laws via Newton's law of gravitational attraction).
We currently have an understanding of QM that doesn't reconcile well with macroscopic observation and requires a lot of intuitions to be broken (including, possibly, the singular nature of existence, time-forward causality, or lightspeed-constrained information locality). I can't help but wonder if there's some equivalent to "Assuming Earth is the center of the coordinate frame" that we currently do that forces these unintuitive (though working) solutions.
The solar system moved in epicycles because "it just did," until several leaps of intuition allowed us to see how it didn't. I wonder if there are similar leaps of intuition waiting on the horizon to allow us to explain quantum entanglement without nonlocal information sharing (hidden variables, we have shown, is not it).
Why should physics care about human "intuition" at the macroscopic level? That's an incredibly anthropic point of view to take on a cosmos that couldn't care less if we didn't exist.
if they are just a story, it feels like a complicated story to get to the goal.
At the same time, I completely agree that the story of wave function collapse also smells. It creates a distinction between observer and observed reality, and that creates its own set of paradoxes (we can put Schrodinger's cats in nested boxes all day long, and some of the boxes even include experimenters who think they are observing the cat, but experimenters outside the lab don't agree with them that they are the observers!).
Looking at the multiverse as branching is where the confusion comes in. There's one Universal wave-function. Why we don't experience the wave-function directly is the mystery.
What I see in QM right now "smells" like we're having to compromise too many intuitions to reconcile what the experiments are showing us with the way we expect the universe ought to be working. I agree that the universe is under no obligation to work the way we expect it to---problem, what we have right now in QM is a lack of agreement on how to even rework our intuitions to match our observations and the reality the theory describes. That suggests to me that---much like epicycles, or like gravity being separated from acceleration before relativity---the stories we are telling ourselves about what we see are still too complicated, and a simpler explanation that requires us to sacrifice fewer pieces of intuition has not yet been reached.
This is, to be clear, extrapolation. I have no way to know whether such simplification exists or whether we have hit the boundary where nature actually refuses to conform in such a way to our senses and minds that we can change our intuitions to follow her. It's not impossible that this is the case. But if it is, it's a break from the pattern of physics discovery up to this point in human history.
We have intuition to understand QM, people struggle with myths, not lack of intuition. Absence of conservation of energy is one of those myths, only those myths need to be sacrificed.