A photon is essentially an observation, and can only happen once. It is not possible to observe "the same photon"* twice, so it is not possible to observe whether any aspect of the photon "is changing". Hence the idea of a clock appearing to be stopped is invalid because, to appear stopped, at least two observations are needed.From our perspective as observers, if there were a “clock” on board a photon, it would appear to be entirely stopped to us. — Devans99
As per my previous post, we cannot measure the 'length' of a photon, because that would require two or more measurements - one at each 'end'.I think that we must be going wrong somewhere with our theories, because it's incoherent to have an existent with 0 length. — Terrapin Station
I think that we must be going wrong somewhere with our theories, because it's incoherent to have an existent with 0 length. — Terrapin Station
It's not exactly true to say the photon does not experience "time" in the metaphysical sense. If time is change, the photon's "wave function" changes over "our time"; so this evolving wave function can be viewed as a metaphysical time. — boethius
Fundamental particles must somehow go from one event to another between events, there's simply by definition no "classical time" available for this more fundamental time. — boethius
With this concept of speed of causation we can now more clearly see that anything going at this speed cannot experience any internal events, no clock can tick for it — boethius
So it's not accurate to say "it's clock is stuck at the time of the cosmic microwave background" but rather that the photon "has no clock at all", and so any questions about the photon's clock are simply functionally meaningless: — boethius
How can we have a two-dimensional space? — Terrapin Station
The wave function could change but that is only our estimation of where the photon is; it is not the actual particle. Maybe the photon remains unchanged whilst its wave function evolves? That would fit in better with the photon experiencing no time? — Devans99
Dimension just mean how many coordinates are required to define a point in space; in our physics that really means an event in space as Andrewk points out. So you can simply define a physics system with 2 dimensions. A classical system is easy to visualize as it's like most 2D computer games: objects move around in 2 dimensions and interact based on rules. — boethius
Two dimensions isn't really possible. It's just an idea we have. — Terrapin Station
Hidden non-local variable theories are still in the running though? — Devans99
It's entirely possible our world's true substance is a 2 dimensional hologram. — boethius
Oy vey. Say what? Why would you believe something like that? — Terrapin Station
It's possible because it can be mathematically consistent. — boethius
Why would you believe that things we can construct via mathematics might correspond to objective reality? — Terrapin Station
You quote me saying 2 dimensional universe is possible, asking why I "would you believe something like that", I responded why I think it's possible. No where do I say I believe it is the case. I already qualified my use of possible as being internally consistent, not "buildable" and certainly I do not equate possibility with what is true. The context of my assertion is responding to the claim that removing length makes no sense; i.e. results in some internally contradictory scenario, to which I am pointing out that a 2D universe is not contradictory in itself. — boethius
I was saying it makes no sense as something that could actually exist, not as an abstract construction. — Terrapin Station
However the entangled photon could have interacted with a particle billions of years in our past, or even billions of years (or more) into our future. Yet these two events happened simultaneously as viewed from the photons' entangled states. — Jonmel
A conclusion I could infer is that the whole universe is predetermined, macrospic time is therefore merely an illusion. It might be true to say that the whole universe lived out its entire existence instaneously through quantum intereractions. We are now merely witnessing the realtime effects of all these interactions play out... — Jonmel
There is no functional definition of time from the photon's entangled state. No clock can be built to tell us this event happened simultaneously; we can only make a clock that records the time of experiments; so in this case when the two particles were observed (which due to relativity has no absolute definition of simultaneous already), and from there we can note a correlation between the results of experiments of the entangled particles. — boethius
Thanks for this, maybe we need to define (or take as assumption) that the functional definition of time for an entangled state, or indeed that of a waveform, is zero or instantaneous. This could offer insight into quantum phenomena such as observed in the Delayed Choice Quantum Eraser experiment - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delayed-choice_quantum_eraser - where the choice to measure the interference of an entangled photon is made after its pair has already hit a detector. — Jonmel
I've already presented several arguments that a 2D universe could actually exit. — boethius
You may have noticed that I, and others with training in the math of relativity and quantum, have a strong tendency to avoid any interpretation at all. And, many professionals would hear "metaphysical time" and react immediately that the conversation is meaningless. — boethius
What's even crazier than perfectly sensible questions being eliminated in principle from our theories (unlike in Newtonian physics where universal time goes forward moment by moment and any process will be wholly determined by probing smaller processes that make it up), is that our two theories are not mathematically compatible. — boethius
For instance, there is a position in the metaphysics of physics where the observation of particles is truly spontaneous, there is no mechanism of any kind but truly pure random occurrence manifesting with any particular observation; conforming to statistical rules but with absolutely "nothing happening in between" that determines if a particle is observed right or left, spin up or spin down. Although this seems difficult to accept, it seems equally difficult (to me at least) how to reject this view without a infinite regress of mechanism for the mechanism for the mechanism. — boethius
I agree with your definition of the difference between classical and quantum time (what you seem to call metaphysical time). — EnPassant
But if we deem a series of events to be random - like radioactive decay - we should specify by what time line they are random. — EnPassant
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