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Introduction Understanding Quantum Theory New Horizons Lectures. Lecture 13: Understanding Quantum Theory Philip Goyal Philip Goyal New Horizons Lectures. Lecture 13: Understanding Quantum Theory Introduction Understanding Quantum Theory Objectives Objectives I To more sharply articulate what is lacking in our understanding of quantum theory. I To introduce the idea of reconstructing quantum theory, and its role in elucidating the physical meaning of quantum theory. Philip Goyal New Horizons Lectures. Lecture 13: Understanding Quantum Theory Introduction Understanding Quantum Theory Classical Physics Historical Development of Quantum Theory What is lacking in our understanding? The Obstacles What has been done? What do we lack in our understanding of quantum theory? Philip Goyal New Horizons Lectures. Lecture 13: Understanding Quantum Theory Introduction Understanding Quantum Theory Classical Physics Historical Development of Quantum Theory What is lacking in our understanding? The Obstacles What has been done? Classical Physics I What is it about classical physics that makes it seem understandable? I Classical physics provides us with a definite conception of physical reality, the universe as a machine. I The mathematisation of this conception naturally gives rise to a mathematical framework — the classical modelling framework. I Classical physical theories are all built within this framework. I The details of each theory are drawn from experimental observations and general physical principles. Philip Goyal New Horizons Lectures. Lecture 13: Understanding Quantum Theory Introduction Understanding Quantum Theory Classical Physics Historical Development of Quantum Theory What is lacking in our understanding? The Obstacles What has been done? The Mechanical Conception of Physical Reality. Essential intuition: The physical universe is a vast machine. By virtue of this conception, the physical universe has some fundamental properties: I It is rationally understandable. I Law-like: It follows quantitative rules (laws) that we can formulate and comprehend. I Uniformity of Nature: These rules apply everywhere and at all times. I Decomposability: It is possible to discover these rules by studying parts of the universe in isolation from the rest. Philip Goyal New Horizons Lectures. Lecture 13: Understanding Quantum Theory Introduction Understanding Quantum Theory I Classical Physics Historical Development of Quantum Theory What is lacking in our understanding? The Obstacles What has been done? In particular: I Universal Time: Everything changes in step with a ‘universal time’. I Describability: Physical universe completely described at any time by its state and some intrinsic real parameters. I Law of Motion: A universal law of motion determines the state at any other time and is reversible. I Measurements: Outcomes of measurements are determined by the state. I Reproducibility: Measurements can be performed in a manner which is reproducible. I Transparency: There exists a measurement whose outcomes which uniquely pin down the state of the system, whatever the state happens to be. Philip Goyal New Horizons Lectures. Lecture 13: Understanding Quantum Theory Introduction Understanding Quantum Theory Classical Physics Historical Development of Quantum Theory What is lacking in our understanding? The Obstacles What has been done? Classical Modelling Framework I Time is represented by t ∈ R. I Physical state is represented by S ∈ S, where S ⊆ Rn . I Dynamics are represented by one-to-one map, M, over S. I Measurement is represented by a map, A, from S to Rm . I Transparency: There exists a reproducible measurement whose map, A, is invertible and A−1 is onto. Philip Goyal New Horizons Lectures. Lecture 13: Understanding Quantum Theory Introduction Understanding Quantum Theory Classical Physics Historical Development of Quantum Theory What is lacking in our understanding? The Obstacles What has been done? Newtonian Mechanics Using experimental observations (Galileo’s laws of motion; Kepler’s laws) together with intuitive physical notions (force, inertia), a particular theory is obtained. I S(t) = (~r1 , . . . , ~rn ; ~ṙ1 , . . . , ~ṙn ) for n particles labelled 1, . . . , n. I Mt (dt) : S(t) → S(t + dt), ~ 1 dt/m1 , . . . , ~ṙn +F ~ n dt/mn ), where S(t +dt) = (~r1 +~ṙ1 dt, . . . , ~rn +~ṙn dt; ~ṙ1 +F ~ i is the force on the ith particle and mi is its mass. where F I ~ i is calculated via Newton’s law of Gravitation. F I A reproducible measurement exists which returns the values of the positions and velocities of all the particles. Philip Goyal New Horizons Lectures. Lecture 13: Understanding Quantum Theory Introduction Understanding Quantum Theory Classical Physics Historical Development of Quantum Theory What is lacking in our understanding? The Obstacles What has been done? Historical Development of Quantum Theory: 1. A New Mechanics New mechanics of Schroedinger and Heisenberg: a modification of classical physics guided by new physical ideas and mathematical guesswork. I Many non-classical features: statistics, complementarity. I Many mathematical features (e.g. complex numbers) had no obvious physical basis or meaning. I Some key interpretation of the mathematics was given post hoc, e.g. |ψ(x, t)|2 as probability density and not a physical wave. I Pre-supposes the existence of the classical, everyday world of definiteness. Philip Goyal New Horizons Lectures. Lecture 13: Understanding Quantum Theory Introduction Understanding Quantum Theory Classical Physics Historical Development of Quantum Theory What is lacking in our understanding? The Obstacles What has been done? 2. A New Modelling Framework I Dirac and von Neumann developed a Quantum Modelling Framework through a mathematically-guided abstraction from the mechanics of Schroedinger and Heisenberg. I It inherits from the mechanics of Schroedinger and Heisenberg: I the mathematical obscurities (complex numbers, unitary transformations) I the pre-supposition of the existence of a classical, everyday world of definiteness Philip Goyal New Horizons Lectures. Lecture 13: Understanding Quantum Theory Introduction Understanding Quantum Theory Classical Physics Historical Development of Quantum Theory What is lacking in our understanding? The Obstacles What has been done? So, what is lacking in our understanding? I We lack a clear conception of reality which underpins the quantum modelling framework. I In particular, in the quantum modelling framework itself: I We do not understand the physical basis of many of the key mathematical features of the formalism. I We do not understand the presupposition of the existence of a classical world of definiteness. Philip Goyal New Horizons Lectures. Lecture 13: Understanding Quantum Theory Introduction Understanding Quantum Theory Classical Physics Historical Development of Quantum Theory What is lacking in our understanding? The Obstacles What has been done? What obstacles stand in our way? Ideally, we would like a clear conception of reality which, when mathematised, leads to the quantum modelling framework. The main obstacles to forming such a conception are: I Lack of conceptual access to the full mathematical content of the quantum modelling framework. I Unclear understanding of the presupposition of the classical world in the formulation. I Sheer conceptual difficulty of grasping the non-classical properties of quantum reality from a single unifying perspective. Philip Goyal New Horizons Lectures. Lecture 13: Understanding Quantum Theory Introduction Understanding Quantum Theory Classical Physics Historical Development of Quantum Theory What is lacking in our understanding? The Obstacles What has been done? What is needed to overcome these obstacles? I We need to know what physical ideas underpin the quantum modelling framework. I We need as many clues as possible of what the quantum world ‘looks like’ (i.e. what properties it has). I We need the philosophical imagination and philosophical resources to form a conception of reality that provides a unified understanding of the various properties Philip Goyal New Horizons Lectures. Lecture 13: Understanding Quantum Theory Introduction Understanding Quantum Theory Classical Physics Historical Development of Quantum Theory What is lacking in our understanding? The Obstacles What has been done? What has been done? 1. Interpretations: provide a conception of reality which makes sense of some features of the quantum modelling framework. I Copenhagen Interpretation I I Argues for necessity of classicality assumption. Many Worlds Interpretation I Attempts to dispense with classicality assumption altogether. I Argues for a universal wavefunction, and that, via decoherence, measurements as interactions with all possible outcomes occuring can be made sense of. I Argues that probability still makes sense, and that the usual probability rules of quantum theory can be derived from reasonable assumptions. Philip Goyal New Horizons Lectures. Lecture 13: Understanding Quantum Theory Introduction Understanding Quantum Theory Classical Physics Historical Development of Quantum Theory What is lacking in our understanding? The Obstacles What has been done? 2. Reformulations: mathematically re-express the quantum modelling framework or quantum mechanics in a new, physically suggestive way. I I Feynman path-integral reformulation I Quantum mechanics re-expressed in a Lagrangian form. I A Classical limit of quantum mechanics becomes transparent. I Powerful aid to intuition in many situations. Bohm reformulation I Schroedinger equation re-written in form closely resembling the Hamilton-Jacobi equation. I Makes sharply apparent the non-local, instantaneous influences between particles. I Inspired Bell’s exploration of non-locality. Philip Goyal New Horizons Lectures. Lecture 13: Understanding Quantum Theory Introduction Understanding Quantum Theory Classical Physics Historical Development of Quantum Theory What is lacking in our understanding? The Obstacles What has been done? 3. Philosophical reflection: develop philosophical understanding of non-classical features of quantum world. I Complementarity: Bohr formulated a general philosophical notion of complementarity. I Potentiality & Actuality: Heisenberg and Bohm developed the connections between these Aristotelian notions and complementarity. Philip Goyal New Horizons Lectures. Lecture 13: Understanding Quantum Theory Introduction Understanding Quantum Theory Classical Physics Historical Development of Quantum Theory What is lacking in our understanding? The Obstacles What has been done? 4. Properties: discover properties (especially non-classical) of the quantum world, and explore their interrelations in general probabilistic frameworks and toy models. I no-signalling: in spite of entanglement, it is not possible to use entangled states to transmit signals instantaneously. I classical limit behaviour: Ehrenfest’s theorem. Decoherence. I non-locality: Bell’s theorem. I no non-contextuality: Kocken-Specker theorem. I no-cloning: "no universal quantum photocopier" (Wootters and Zurek) I teleportation: Bennett et al. Philip Goyal New Horizons Lectures. Lecture 13: Understanding Quantum Theory Introduction Understanding Quantum Theory Classical Physics Historical Development of Quantum Theory What is lacking in our understanding? The Obstacles What has been done? 5. Modification: Modification of the mathematical formalism of the quantum modelling framework. I Objective Collapse Models I Penrose’s Gravitationally-Induced objective reduction I GRW Collapse Model Philip Goyal New Horizons Lectures. Lecture 13: Understanding Quantum Theory Introduction Understanding Quantum Theory Classical Physics Historical Development of Quantum Theory What is lacking in our understanding? The Obstacles What has been done? 6. Reconstruction: derive the quantum modelling framework from a set of physical assumptions. I Pre-1980s: work of Piron, and others. Logical and abstract. I Post-1980s: several distinct approaches based on physical ideas. Many inspired by thinking informationally about quantum theory. Philip Goyal New Horizons Lectures. Lecture 13: Understanding Quantum Theory