Dancing David
Penultimate Amazing
That's flat-out wrong, and I already explained in detail why. As far as I can tell you completely ignored that post, so there's no point in continuing.
That is a randman discussion in a nut shell.
That's flat-out wrong, and I already explained in detail why. As far as I can tell you completely ignored that post, so there's no point in continuing.
Sol, the delayed choice experiment is said to be a demonstration of Wheeler's thought experiment.That's flat-out wrong, and I already explained in detail why. As far as I can tell you completely ignored that post, so there's no point in continuing.
Wave-particle duality is strikingly illustrated by Wheeler's delayed-choice gedanken experiment, where the configuration of a two-path interferometer is chosen after a single-photon pulse has entered it: Either the interferometer is closed (that is, the two paths are recombined) and the interference is observed, or the interferometer remains open and the path followed by the photon is measured. We report an almost ideal realization of that gedanken experiment with single photons allowing unambiguous which-way measurements. The choice between open and closed configurations, made by a quantum random number generator, is relativistically separated from the entry of the photon into the interferometer.
Wheeler realized that the observer's choice might control those variables in a test.
"If what you say is true," he said (in effect), "then I may choose to know a property after the event should already have taken place." [1] Wheeler realized that in such a situation, the observer's choice would determine the outcome of the experiment – regardless of whether the outcome should logically have been determined long ago.
"Nonsense," said the reductionists. "Rubbish," said the materialists. "Completely absurd," said the naïve realists. "Yup," said the mathematicians.
And so Wheeler's thought experiment and the predictions of quantum mechanics were brought to the laboratory for testing. [2] This is what happens.
....
In summary, we have chosen whether to know which slit the particle went through, by choosing to use the telescopes or not, which are the instruments that would give us the information about which slit the particle went through. We have delayed this choice until a time after the particles "have gone through one slit or the other slit or both slits," so to speak. Yet, it seems paradoxically that our later choice of whether to obtain this information determines whether the particle passed through one slit or the other slit or both slits, so to speak.
Does our choice "change the past"?
How long can we delay the choice? In Wheeler's original thought experiment, he imagined the phenomenon on a cosmic scale, as follows:
1. A distant star emits a photon many billions of years ago.
2. The photon must pass a dense galaxy (or black hole) directly in its path toward earth.
"Gravitational lensing" predicted by general relativity (and well verified) will make the light bend around the galaxy or black hole. The same photon can, therefore, take either of two paths around the galaxy and still reach earth – it can take the left path and bend back toward earth; or it can take the right path and bend back toward earth. Bending around the left side is the experimental equivalent of going through the left slit of a barrier; bending around the right side is the equivalent of going through the right slit.
3. The photon continues for a very long time (perhaps a few more billion years) on its way toward earth.
4. On earth (many billions of years later), an astronomer chooses to use a screen type of light projector, encompassing both sides of the intervening and the surrounding space without focusing or distinguishing among regions. The photon will land somewhere along the field of focus without our astronomer being able to tell which side of the galaxy/black hole the photon passed, left or right. So the distribution pattern of the photon (even of a single photon, but easily recognizable after a lot of photons are collected) will be an interference pattern.
5. Alternatively, based on what she had for breakfast, our astronomer might choose to use a binocular apparatus, with one side of the binoculars (one telescope) focused exclusively on the left side of the intervening galaxy, and the other side focussed exclusively on the right side of the intervening galaxy. In that case the "pattern" will be a clump of photons at one side, and a clump of photons at the other side
Sol, the delayed choice experiment is said to be a demonstration of Wheeler's thought experiment.
In MWI, the split universes may be internally consistent with causality after the split. However, since the choice affects the which-way path in the past as seen from the observer, if as MWI this is a purely mechanical process, the divergence of the universes must occur with entangled particles at a point earlier than the measurement. If the choice, the measurement, shows the which-way path as these experiments demonstrate, then PRIOR to the measurement, there must be divergence between the universes that would have shown the interference from the other universe or the wave-like progression.
Just positing multiple universes does not explain the splitting occurring before the measurement.
Now, I am sure MWI has an explanation but just saying there are multiple universes may explain away non-locality but I don't see how it gets around the splitting occurring prior to the measurement as delayed-choice and later experiments show.
Information rather than direct intervention destroys wavelike behaviour in an experiment done at the University of Rochester. A laser fires photons past a half-silvered mirror, or beam splitter, to two down-converters, labelled 1 and 2. These convert each incident photon into two lower-energy photons, called signals and idlers. Because the signal detector cannot tell how the signals arrived, each signal takes both routes, like a wave, generating an interference pattern at the signal detector. But the pattern can be destroyed merely by blocking idlers from down-converter 1 (dotted line). The reason is that each signal's path can now be retraced; simultaneous detection of a signal and idler indicates that both came from a photon reflected by the beam splitter into down-converter 2.
So in MWI, how does the measurement of merely blocking the "idler" photon cause the photon to take only take one path BEFORE the measurement?
I think I got that. Thanks. The delayed choice quantum eraser experiment cited earlier seems to suggest a different wrinkle however, but need to study it more.
Why if it's mechanical, would a particle travelling in a particle-like fashion switch back to a wave-like pattern?
However if the phase coherence is destroyed, as it is by any interaction that involves macroscopic objects that record any information, no interference will take place.
But if that is the case, how can it exhibit interference again?
It's measured. There is a split. But if we devise a way that we can no longer tell the which-way path, even though the split must have occurred, the interference reappears.
Although Everett has said that people cannot feel the other branches of his Many-Worlds interpretation, Deutsch describes a gedanken experiment in which an observer can feel himself having been split into two branches that have now merged into his present branch, in the sense that, although he accurately remembers only one branch, he can infer that "... there was more than one copy of himself (and the atom) in existence at that time, and that these copies merged to form his present self.
s. i. :
I'm not quite clear on how you personally view the MWI version of quantum theory. Do you believe these other worlds actually exist in some tangible sense or are they merely hypothetical, ghostlike or potential existences -- whatever you think that may mean. You may have answered this question somewhere -- if so, sorry for the redundancy.
Sol, I don't think you are doing justice to the delayed-choice quantum eraser experiment.
Never mind what I personally believe, that isn't relevant. I would say that what defines the MWI is the assertion that the wavefunction is real - it is a direct description of reality. If so, all these worlds (at least all the decohered ones) are equally tangible and real.
OK, I'll never mind what you personally believe. My (layman's) understanding of the wavefunction is that it describes the probability of something (e.g.: position) over time. In what sense is it real and a direct description of reality? Is it real in the same sense that any probability density function that describes the relative likelihood of an occurrence at a point is also real in that it realy works? Or, it is it something more tangible than that? Any probability density function is merely a function that describes the relative likelihood for some random variable to occur, but has no reality concerning the actual occurrence of any single or collection of points. How and why would the wavefunction be more "real" than that?
It is at least more tangible than the Copenhagen interpretation, in which the answer to to what kind of quantum state macroscopic objects have is "we don't do that," and one instead lives with the oddity that there is no quantum state of an object that is composed of quantum particles.
Is seems to me that much doubt still remains as to whether there is any reality to the wavefunction. After all, it is merely a mathematical model of something. Certainly, there is some underlying reality being modeled by the wavefunction, but what can it possibly mean to say the wavefunction itself is "real" any more than the "current-function" in terms of voltage and resistance (I = V/R) is real?