geordief Posted August 29, 2017 Posted August 29, 2017 An object is apparently in some sort of "suspended animation" as it crosses "empty space" and then when an "observation " is made the "waveform collapses" and its probable location is "set in stone" (this is exemplified ,it seems to me in the double slit experiment) Is it possible to say with more detail what "collapsing the waveform" actually means? Or do we just have to say "well this is what happens and that is how we describe the phenomenon with words" ? As a side thought ,is there any mileage in the idea that when any "observation" is made , we are looking at two probability waveforms meeting/interacting/superimposing (that of the object and also that of the detector) ?
Prometheus Posted August 29, 2017 Posted August 29, 2017 I've only studied this stuff to a superficial degree but here's my understanding, hope it makes sense. Before you measure a wavefunction it exists as a linear superposition of a number of composite wavefunctions. That means the wavefunction is made out of lots of other wavefunctions all added together. The contribution of some of those other wavefunctions is greater than others. When we make an observation the wavefunction collapses to just one of those composite wavefunctions, with a probability proportional to its contribution to the overall wavefunction. I believe the collapse of the wavefunction refers to just this: what was once described by a sum a wavefunctions is now observed to be just one of those wavefunctions.
geordief Posted August 29, 2017 Author Posted August 29, 2017 (edited) Thanks . I wonder what determines the make up of the composite waveform. Are there a finite amount of these component parts? (is everything smooth? ) What about my idea that the detecting object also has its own set of waveforms which also collapse when the detection event occurs ? Is this actually part of the model (just that I have not come across it explicitly stated ) ? Edited August 29, 2017 by geordief
swansont Posted August 29, 2017 Posted August 29, 2017 ! Moderator Note Hijack and responses have been split to the trash. Let's stay on-topic here, please.
studiot Posted August 29, 2017 Posted August 29, 2017 (edited) 3 hours ago, geordief said: Thanks . I wonder what determines the make up of the composite waveform. Are there a finite amount of these component parts? (is everything smooth? ) What about my idea that the detecting object also has its own set of waveforms which also collapse when the detection event occurs ? Is this actually part of the model (just that I have not come across it explicitly stated ) ? You need to understand the mathematics of Hilbert spaces to understand this issue. The linear combination may be finite or infinite, there is not restriction. The observables correspond one-to-one to the self adjoint operators in a separable Hilbert space of infinite dimension, H. The pure states correspond one-to-one to the one dimensional subspaces of H. Every state is a (possibly infinite) convex combination of pure states. (This is a mathematical statement of waveform generation and collapse) 'Collapse of the waveform' is linked to the so called 'measurement problem' or measurement paradox and is very difficult to discuss without some higher maths. Try reading here http://www.informationphilosopher.com/problems/measurement/ Essentially the measurement problem, waveform collapse and 'paradoxes' like Schroedinger's cat are about the crossover point from deterministic classical mechanics to probabilistic quantum mechanics and how this is handled. Edited August 29, 2017 by studiot
geordief Posted August 29, 2017 Author Posted August 29, 2017 (edited) thanks, i will have a look. btw. can you remind me again of that Bensen (?) book you recommended to me a few months ago (it was a historical account of the leadings up to modern Relativity ) i can't find it now without fine tooth combing my posts and I want to order it on ebay or Amazon. ps no chance of an (understandable) example of a waveform with just 2 components, I suppose.(since you imply they can be finite in number) Edited August 29, 2017 by geordief
studiot Posted August 29, 2017 Posted August 29, 2017 Fields of force William Berkson Routledge Kegan & Paul 1974 Here is the beginning of the axiomatic mathematical process of deriving QM. Another dozen pages of development will arrive at axiom VIII which is the part of my previous post.
hoola Posted August 29, 2017 Posted August 29, 2017 I have question ....when a photon waveform collapses, does the entire energy that is contained in the waveform get "collapsed" to a localized point, conserving the energy, or is some inefficiency observed in the transformation process?
studiot Posted August 29, 2017 Posted August 29, 2017 (edited) 2 hours ago, hoola said: I have question ....when a photon waveform collapses, does the entire energy that is contained in the waveform get "collapsed" to a localized point, conserving the energy, or is some inefficiency observed in the transformation process? It doesn't work like that. Energy is never all at one point in QM The total energy doesn't change because of the collapse, just the distribution. edit. Note in my extract, halfway down the left hand page "A point in phase space has no physical meaning" In classical science we attribute properties to things. So, for instance, the mass of an oxygen atom is 16 units whether it is buzzing about in an oxygen atom in the atmosphere , or combined with hydrogen atoms to form ocean water or locked into the rocks in the form of silica or iron oxide. But in QM we cannot attribute properties to a particle alone. The properties depend upon the environment. So the mass of an electron appears different depending upon whether it is within an ionic lattice, travelling freely in empty space or part of a free atom. Our method of measurement also affects the answer. This is quite separate from relativistic effects. I have not included those as they would only complicate matters and obscure the QM aspect. So when we talk about the properties of a particle in QM we always have to do this in relation to the environment. Edited August 29, 2017 by studiot
swansont Posted August 30, 2017 Posted August 30, 2017 15 hours ago, hoola said: I have question ....when a photon waveform collapses, does the entire energy that is contained in the waveform get "collapsed" to a localized point, conserving the energy, or is some inefficiency observed in the transformation process? Which wave are you discussing? The wave function, or the deBroglie wave? I'm guessing the former, since you ask about collapse. It doesn't have any energy. It's a description; when you square it it tells you the probability of being in a location or having a particular momentum. When you operate on it with the hamiltonian it tells you the energy of the system. It's not something that physically exists
geordief Posted August 30, 2017 Author Posted August 30, 2017 55 minutes ago, swansont said: Which wave are you discussing? The wave function, or the deBroglie wave? I'm guessing the former, since you ask about collapse. It doesn't have any energy. It's a description; when you square it it tells you the probability of being in a location or having a particular momentum. When you operate on it with the hamiltonian it tells you the energy of the system. It's not something that physically exists Can that "energy of the system" principle be extrapolated to encompass all connected systems? (there are no isolated systems ,are there?) Is it possible that the energy of the entire universe (to include the (unobservable part) is theoretically zero at all times?
swansont Posted August 30, 2017 Posted August 30, 2017 58 minutes ago, geordief said: Can that "energy of the system" principle be extrapolated to encompass all connected systems? (there are no isolated systems ,are there?) People have argued that you can (in principle) write a wave function of the universe. But that's in part because you can make a composite out of independent wave functions. There are systems where treating them as isolated is a reasonable assumption. 58 minutes ago, geordief said: Is it possible that the energy of the entire universe (to include the (unobservable part) is theoretically zero at all times? Possible, and one scenario that's considered.
Mordred Posted August 30, 2017 Posted August 30, 2017 To add to Swansont's post the Wheeler De-Whit equation is one that tries to use a Universal wavefunction.
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