As far as I can recall it is about which are the most popular interpretations of QM, and doesn't even mention the measurement problem. — andrewk
But does it accurately represent how the interference pattern arises and why it disappears when we take measurements next to one of the slits? — andrewk
To get into that I think we'd first need to take a step back and try to reach a shared understanding of what 'the measurement problem' is. It is often talked about but rarely defined. It is often presented just in terms of a vague gesture towards quantum weirdness in general.But doesn’t the whole question of ‘which interpretation’ - Copenhagen, MWI, etc - revolve around ‘the measurement problem’ — Wayfarer
What do you consider the measurement problem to be? — andrewk
The measurement problem in quantum mechanics is the problem of how (or whether) wave function collapse occurs. The inability to observe this process directly has given rise to different interpretations of quantum mechanics, and poses a key set of questions that each interpretation must answer. The wave function in quantum mechanics evolves deterministically according to the Schrödinger equation as a linear superposition of different states, but actual measurements always find the physical system in a definite state. Any future evolution is based on the state the system was discovered to be in when the measurement was made, meaning that the measurement "did something" to the system that is not obviously a consequence of Schrödinger evolution. — Wikipedia
As to whether wave functions or probability fields are 'real' I prefer to leave those questions to ontologists — andrewk
I read your discussion on PF, and I agree with the answers, although I would not have used the word 'gobbledegook' myself. — andrewk
A simple way to see it is that it means that each particle is interfering with itself, not with other particles.
belief in a real world is dubious because our perception is based on our own created life values. science uses experiment to validate theories about the real world but they only validate it to other beings that share the same values. In that process the idea of the real world sneaks by without resolving the fact that we are basically making up the world to conform to our values — Martin Krumins
What causes the interference pattern to disappear when particles are detected going through one of the slits is the interaction between the detector (including the recording apparatus connected to that) and the particles, not the fact that a conscious entity looks at the results of the interaction. The interference pattern would still disappear if nobody looked at the screen or the detector. — andrewk
Belief in a real world is dubious... — Martin Krumins
There are a number of different double-slit experiments, and all of them (or at least, all the ones I know, including several 'delayed choice' and 'quantum eraser' versions) are completely explained by the mathematical analysis, which does not hold any mysteries, — andrewk
You raised a question, which was whether the particle rate (BTW more accurately characterised as the field strength) determines the degree of undulation in the bars. The answer to that was No, and that answer is correct. In your later posts you tried to articulate a point about time and space but the point was not expressed clearly enough to understand. I too could not understand what point you were trying to raise. I thought the way people said the point was not understandable was regrettably curt.I think I'm raising a serious and possibly novel argument in that thread, and I don't think the person there I was discussing it with understood it. — Wayfarer
It's the fact that it is not time-dependent which is of interest. I don't think you could replicate this outcome using a physical medium like water waves in a tank, because in that situation, 'time' would be a boundary condition. That is the sense in which 'waves' and 'interference' might actually be a metaphor for the effect; the effect is not the consequence of actual waves, but of the interaction of probabilities only. The interpretive challenge is then that it appears to demonstrate 'real possibilities' i.e. possibilities that have physical consequences. – Wayfarer Dec 5 '16 at 2:29
It is not time dependent because the boundary conditions, which in the end define the probabilities, are not time dependent is what I am saying. It is the particular use of wave equations. with operators on psi, that makes the difference between material waves or energy waves and probability waves. – anna v Dec 5 '16 at 4:49
I don't have a clear idea of what you mean when you say time is not a factor. — andrewk
If by 'flow' you mean wave height then Yes, subject to irregularities caused by turbulence.Consider if you were actually doing the experiment with water and not with photons. Would you produce the same interference pattern regardless of the rate of flow? — Wayfarer
I saw that caveat on the PF discussion, and I suspect it's wrong. But it doesn't affect the discussion here, so we needn't bother investigating whether it is.with the caveat that 'only up to the point where the rate is so high that the interaction between different electrons can no longer be neglected'. — Wayfarer
I reiterate that I think to call this gobbledegook is uncharitable and, I think, bordering on rude. But I have to confess that I cannot imagine what it would mean for something to show up that is not inside time and space.whatever is showing up, is not 'inside' time and space — Wayfarer
But I have to confess that I cannot imagine what it would mean for something to show up that is not inside time and space. — andrewk
Werner Heisenberg, the quantum pioneer famous for his uncertainty principle, considered his quantum math to describe potential outcomes of measurements of which one would become the actual result. The quantum concept of a “probability wave,” describing the likelihood of different possible outcomes of a measurement, was a quantitative version of Aristotle’s potential, Heisenberg wrote in his well-known 1958 book Physics and Philosophy. “It introduced something standing in the middle between the idea of an event and the actual event, a strange kind of physical reality just in the middle between possibility and reality.”
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