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Title: Protective Measurement and the Interpretation of the Wave Function


1
Protective Measurement and the Interpretation of
the Wave Function
  • Shan Gao
  • Unit for HPS Center for time
  • University of Sydney

2
PM the Interpretation of the Wave Function
  • Schrödinger asked at the fifth Solvay Conference
    (1927)

What does the ?-function mean now, that is, how
does the system described by it really look like
in three dimensions?
3
PM the Interpretation of the Wave Function
  • Two views
  • PM idea
  • My analysis

4
Two views
  • Two realistic views
  • The wave function is a physical field.
  • dBB theory, MWI, dynamical collapse theories
    etc.
  • The wave function is a description of some sort
    of ergodic motion of particles.
  • It is assumed by stochastic interpretation etc.

5
Two views
  • de Broglie-Bohm theory
  • The wave function is generally considered as an
    objective physical field, called ?-field.
  • Various views on the nature of the field
  • a field similar to electromagnetic field (Bohm
    1952)
  • active information field (Bohm and Hiley 1993)
  • a field carrying energy and momentum (Holland
    1993)
  • causal agent more abstract than ordinary fields
    (Valentini 1997)
  • nomological view (Dürr, Goldstein and Zanghì
    1997)

6
Two views
  • Many-worlds interpretation
  • The wave function is taken as the basic physical
    entity with no a priori interpretation.
  • Observers and object systems They all are
    represented in a single structure, the field.
    (Everett 1957)

7
Two views
  • Dynamical collapse theories
  • Mass density ontology (Ghirardi, Grassi and
    Benatti 1995)
  • What the theory is about, what is real out
    there at a given space point x, is just a field,
    i.e. a variable m(x,t) given by the expectation
    value of the mass density operator M(x) at x.
    (Ghirardi 2002)

8
Two views
  • The essential difference lies in simultaneity
  • A field exists throughout space simultaneously.
  • The ergodic motion of a particle exists
    throughout space in a time-divided way.
  • A particle is still in one position at each
    instant, and it is only during a time interval
    that the ergodic motion of the particle spreads
    throughout space.
  • Which view is right?

9
Two views
  • Outline of my argument
  • The above two views of the wave function can be
    tested by analyzing the mass and charge density
    of a quantum system.
  • The field interpretation leads to
    self-interactions that contradict experimental
    observations.
  • A further analysis can also determine which sort
    of ergodic motion of particles the wave function
    describes.

10
PM idea
  • How do mass and charge distribute for a single
    quantum system?
  • The mass and charge of a classical system always
    localize in a definite position in space.
  • According to PM, a quantum system has effective
    mass and charge density distributing in space,
    proportional to the modulus square of its wave
    function.
  • (Aharonov, Anandan and Vaidman 1993)

11
PM idea
  • Suggested by the interaction terms in the
    Schrödinger equation
  • If the charge does not distribute in some regions
    where the wave function is nonzero, then there
    will not exist any electrostatic interaction
    there. But the interaction does exist.
  • Since the integral is the total
    charge of the system, the charge density
    distribution in space will be .

12
PM idea
  • Note that even in another theory different from
    SQM such as de Broglie-Bohm theory, the
    explanation of the measurement result of a PM
    should be the same. For example, the result of an
    appropriate adiabatic measurement of the Gauss
    flux out of a certain region should also be
    explained as the integral of the effective charge
    density over this region.
  • Otherwise these measurement results can only be
    regarded as meaningless. But this strategy can
    hardly be satisfying, as we can then dismiss the
    measurement results of any property (by standard
    von Neumann procedure) as meaningless and thus
    deny the existence of all properties.
  • Therefore, the above conclusion that a quantum
    system has an effective mass and charge density
    also holds true in other interpretations of QM.

13
PM idea
  • Standard von Neumann procedure
  • Conventional impulse measurements
  • Coupling interaction short duration and strong.
  • Measurement result eigenvalues of A.
  • Expectation value of A is obtained from the
    ensemble average.
  • Weak measurements
  • Coupling interaction short duration but weak.
  • Measurement result expectation value of A.
  • Individual measurement is imprecise. A normal
    ensemble is needed.
  • Protective measurements
  • Coupling interaction long duration and weak.
  • Measurement result expectation value of A.
  • Individual measurement is precise. Only a small
    ensemble is needed.

14
PM idea
  • The mass and charge density can be measured by
    protective measurement as expectation values of
    certain variables for a single quantum system.
  • An appropriate adiabatic measurement of the Gauss
    flux out of a certain region will yield the value
    of the total charge inside this region, namely
    the integral of the effective charge density
    over this region.
  • Similarly, we can measure the effective mass
    density of the system in principle by an
    appropriate adiabatic measurement of the flux of
    its gravitational field.

15
PM idea
  • A quantum system has effective mass and charge
    density distributing in space, proportional to
    the modulus square of its wave function.
  • Admittedly there have been some controversies
    about the meaning of protective measurement, but
    the debate mainly centers on the reality of the
    wave function (see e.g. Rovelli 1994 Uffink
    1999 Dass and Qureshi 1999).
  • If one insists on a realistic interpretation of
    QM, then the debate will be mostly irrelevant and
    protective measurement will have strict
    restrictions on the realistic views of WF.
  • Which view is consistent with this result?

16
My analysis
  • If the mass and charge density simultaneously
    distributes in space (i.e. taking the wave
    function as a physical field),
  • A field by definition is a physical entity which
    properties are simultaneously distributed in
    space, no matter what type of field it is.
  • Then the densities in different regions will have
    gravitational and electrostatic interactions.
  • This not only violates the superposition
    principle of QM but also contradicts experimental
    observations.

17
My analysis
  • The free Schrödinger equation with electrostatic
    and gravitational self-interactions is
  • The measure of the strength of the electrostatic
    self-interaction (Salzman 2005) is
  • The evolution of the wave function of an electron
    will be remarkably different from that predicted
    by QM and confirmed by experiments.
  • The energy levels of hydrogen atoms will be
    remarkably changed

18
My analysis
  • Therefore, the mass and charge density can only
    exist throughout space in a time-divided way.
  • This means that at every instant there is only a
    localized particle with mass and charge, and only
    during a time interval, the time average of the
    ergodic motion of the particle forms the
    effective mass and charge density.
  • As a result, the wave function is a description
    of some sort of ergodic motion of particles.

19
My analysis
  • Objection 1 Charge density talking is nonsense.
  • We never hear about it.
  • Read the papers about PM.
  • Aharonov, Y., Anandan, J. and Vaidman, L. (1993).
    Meaning of the wave function, Phys. Rev. A 47,
    4616.
  • Aharonov, Y. and Vaidman, L. (1993). Measurement
    of the Schrödinger wave of a single particle,
    Phys. Lett. A 178, 38.
  • Aharonov, Y., Anandan, J. and Vaidman, L. (1996).
    The meaning of protective measurements, Found.
    Phys. 26, 117.
  • Dass, N. D. H. and Qureshi, T. (1999). Critique
    of protective measurements. Phys. Rev. A 59,
    2590.
  • Drezet, A. (2006). Comment on Protective
    measurements and Bohm trajectories, Phys. Lett.
    A 350, 416.
  • Gao, S. (2010). Meaning of the wave function.
    Forthcoming.

20
My analysis
  • Objection 2 No mass and charge density exists,
    because SE is linear and forbids
    self-interactions.
  • The existence of mass and charge density does not
    lead to self-interactions if the wave function is
    a description of some sort of ergodic motion of
    particles.
  • Only the field view entails remarkable
    electrostatic self-interaction that contradicts
    experiments.
  • In this sense, what linear SE rejects is not
    charge density but the field view.

21
My analysis
  • Objection 3 Fields do not necessarily entail
    self-interactions. EM field is an example.
  • The non-existence of EM self-interaction results
    from the fact that EM field itself has no charge.
  • If the EM field had charge, then there would also
    exist EM self-interaction due to the nature of
    field, namely the simultaneous existence of its
    properties in space.
  • Although an EM field has no EM self-interaction,
    it does have gravitational self-interaction the
    simultaneous existence of energy densities in
    different locations for an EM field must generate
    a gravitational interaction, though the
    interaction is too weak to be detected by current
    technology.

22
My analysis
  • Objection 4 ?-field is so different from
    ordinary fields that it does not lead to
    self-interactions, even if it has mass and
    charge.
  • A field by definition is a physical entity which
    properties are simultaneously distributed in
    space, no matter what type of field it is.
  • Consider a single electron. Its wave function
    lives in real space and its mass and charge are
    simultaneously distributed in the space when
    taking the wave function as a field. So it is
    very difficult to deny the existence of an
    electrostatic self-interaction of the field.
  • The fact that ?-field lives on configuration
    space does not remove the simultaneity nature of
    field rather, it is in fact a common objection
    to the field view, and moreover, it in some sense
    favors the particle view. One can readily explain
    the multi-dimensionality of the wave function in
    terms of the ergodic motion of many particles.

23
My analysis
  • Summary
  • PM implies the existence of mass and charge
    density.
  • In order to avoid self-interactions, the mass and
    charge density can only exist throughout space in
    a time-divided way, i.e., it is formed by time
    average of the motion of particles.
  • Therefore, the wave function is a description of
    some sort of ergodic motion of particles.

24
My analysis
  • Which sort of motion?
  • I only have time to tell my answer.
  • For details see my paper Meaning of the wave
    function.
  • (philsci-archive.pitt.edu/8342/)

What the WF describes is random discontinuous
motion of particles.
25
My analysis
  • Which sort of ergodic motion?
  • The classical ergodic models that assume
    continuous motion of particles are not consistent
    with QM.
  • problems of stochastic interpretation
  • infinite velocity at the nodes of a stationary
    state
  • sudden acceleration and large radiation near
    these nodes
  • finite ergodic time

26
My analysis
  • Double-slit experiment

A single particle passes through both slits in a
discontinuous way. A phenomenon which is
impossible, absolutely impossible, to explain in
any classical way. R. Feynman
27
My analysis
  • The ergodic motion must be discontinuous.
  • If the motion of a particle is discontinuous and
    random, then the particle can readily move
    throughout all possible regions where the wave
    function is nonzero during an arbitrarily short
    time interval near a given instant.
  • This will solve the problems plagued by the
    classical ergodic models.
  • no finite time scale
  • readily spreading to spatially separated regions
  • no infinite velocity and accelerating radiation
  • new definitions of energy and momentum

28
My analysis
  • By assuming the wave function is a (complete)
    description for the motion of particles, we can
    reach this conclusion in a more direct way,
    independent of the above analysis.
  • The modulus square of the wave function not only
    gives the probability density of finding a
    particle in certain locations, but also gives the
    objective probability density of the particle
    being there.
  • (they should be the same when assuming M
    reflects R)
  • Obviously, this kind of motion is essentially
    random and discontinuous.

29
My analysis
  • The wavefunction gives not the density of stuff,
    but gives rather (on squaring its modulus) the
    density of probability. Probability of what
    exactly? Not of the electron being there, but of
    the electron being found there, if its position
    is measured. Why this aversion to being and
    insistence on finding? The founding fathers
    were unable to form a clear picture of things on
    the remote atomic scale.
  • J. S. Bell, Against measurement (1990)
  • Bells Everett (?) theory (1981)

30
My analysis
  • The wave function is a description of quantum
    motion of particles, which is essentially
    discontinuous and random.
  • (Implied by PM)

31
My analysis
  • Description of random discontinuous motion (RDM)
  • position measure density and position measure
    flux density
  • Its equation of motion is the Schrödinger
    equation in QM. (spacetime translation invariance
    relativistic invariance)
  • The wave function is a complete description of
    RDM of particles.

32
My analysis
  • It is very direct to extend the description of
    RDM of a single particle to RDM of many
    particles.
  • For the RDM state of N particles, we can define a
    joint position measure density
    . It represents the relative probability density
    of the situation in which particle 1 is in
    position x1, particle 2 is in position x2, ,
    and particle N is in position xN.
  • In a similar way, we can define the joint
    position measure flux density
  • The many-body wave function composed of them is
    then defined in 3N-dimensional configuration
    space, not in the real 3D space.

33
My analysis
  • It seems that random discontinuous motion (RDM)
    provides a natural realistic alternative to the
    orthodox view.
  • But the transition process from being there to
    being found there, which is closely related to
    the quantum measurement problem, needs to be
    further explained.

34
Implications
  • The main realistic interpretations of QM cannot
    readily accommodate the result that the wave
    function has mass and charge density.
  • de Broglie-Bohm theory
  • Many-worlds interpretation
  • Dynamical collapse theories

35
Implications
  • de Broglie-Bohm theory will be wrong
  • The theory takes the wave function as a physical
    field (i.e. ?-field) and further adds the
    non-ergodic motion of Bohmian particles to
    interpret QM.
  • This obviously runs counter to the picture of RDM
    of particles.

36
Implications
  • It is often claimed that dBB theory gives the
    same predictions as QM by means of a quantum
    equilibrium hypothesis.
  • But this equivalence is based on the wrong
    premise that the wave function, regarded as a
    ?-field, has no mass and charge density.
  • Can dBB theory accommodate the result that the
    wave function has mass and charge density?

37
Implications
  • Taking the wave function as a ?-field will lead
    to the existence of electrostatic
    self-interaction that contradicts both QM and
    experiments.
  • No matter how to interpret the wave function,
    there will also exist an electromagnetic
    interaction between it and the Bohmian particle
    for a charged quantum system, as they both have
    charge. This also contradicts QM and experiments.
  • To sum up, dBB theory is either empirically
    incorrect (by admitting these interactions) or
    logically inconsistent (by denying them).

38
Implications
  • Many-worlds interpretation will be wrong
  • Its ontology needs to be revised from field to
    particle.
  • It can be further argued that there is only one
    world and QM is also a one-world theory in terms
    of RDM.

39
My analysis
  • QM is a one-world theory
  • Quantum superposition exists in a form of time
    division by means of RDM of particles.
  • During quantum evolution, there is only one
    observer (as well as one quantum system and one
    measuring device) all along in a continuous time
    flow.

40
Implications
  • 1st serious objection to MWI
  • If there are indeed many worlds, then each world
    can only exist in a discontinuous dense instant
    set, a time sub-flow of the continuous time flow.
  • As a result, at every instant only one of these
    worlds exists, and all other worlds do not exist
    at all.
  • Many worlds cannot exist at instants.
  • Can they exist during a time interval?

41
Implications
  • 2nd serious objection to MWI
  • Since the dense instant set occupied by each
    world is essentially random according to RDM,
    many worlds can never be formed.
  • Each world cannot know which future instants it
    should occupy. It has no way to select from the
    random discontinuous instants the definite
    continuous content that should belong to it.
  • Many worlds cannot exist during a time interval
    either.

42
My analysis
  • Dynamical collapse theories will be in the right
    direction by admitting wavefunction collapse.
  • But existing collapse theories require major
    revision
  • Ontology-revised from field to particle
  • Reformulated in the framework of RDM (e.g. the
    random source to collapse the wave function is
    not a classical field but the inherent random
    motion of particles)
  • RDM will help to solve the problems of existing
    theories.
  • The compete evolution law of RDM in discrete
    spacetime will include two parts (1) linear
    Schrödinger evolution (2) nonlinear stochastic
    evolution describing dynamical WF collapse (Gao
    2006).
  • No doubt much work still needs to be done
  • I am working on the collapse models satisfying
    energy conservation.

43
Implications
  • But existing collapse theories require major
    revision
  • Ontology-revised from field to particle
  • Reformulated in the framework of RDM
  • The random source to collapse the wave function
    is not a classical field but the inherent random
    motion of particles.
  • Individual collapse processes satisfy energy
    conservation.
  • Finite-sized instants (or discrete Planck time)
    is needed (to release the randomness and
    discontinuity existing at instants).
  • The staying tendency of particles as the real
    cause of WFC.
  • The compete evolution law of RDM in discrete
    spacetime will include two parts (1) linear
    Schrödinger evolution (2) nonlinear stochastic
    evolution describing dynamical WF collapse (Gao
    2006).

44
PM the Interpretation of the Wave Function
  • Summary
  • PM implies WF has mass and charge density.
  • The field view leads to self-interactions.
  • Classical ergodic models of particles also fail.
  • What the wave function describes is
  • random discontinuous motion of particles.
  • Shan Gao (2010), Meaning of the wave function.
  • (http//philsci-archive.pitt.edu/8342/)

45
PM the Interpretation of the Wave Function
  • so crowded with empty sophistication that it
    is extremely difficult to perceive the simple
    errors at the basis. It is like fighting the
    hydra-cut off one ugly head, and eight
    formalizations take its place.
  • --- P. K. Feyerabend (1924-1994)
  • How to Defend Society Against Science
  • Against quantum foundations

46
Selected publications
  • S. Gao (2004) Quantum collapse, consciousness and
    superluminal communication, Foundations of
    Physics Letters 17(2), 167-182.
  • S. Gao (2006) A model of wavefunction collapse in
    discrete space-time, International Journal of
    Theoretical Physics 45, 1965.
  • S. Gao (2006) Quantum Motion Unveiling the
    Mysterious Quantum World. Bury St Edmunds Arima
    Publishing.
  • S. Gao (2008) God Does Play Dice with the
    Universe. Bury St Edmunds Arima Publishing.
  • S. Gao (2010) On Diósi-Penrose criterion of
    gravity-induced quantum collapse, International
    Journal of Theoretical Physics 49, 849853.
  • S. Gao (2010) Meaning of the wave function,
    Forthcoming in International Journal of Quantum
    Chemistry.
  • S. Gao (2010) The wave function and quantum
    reality, Forthcoming in AIP Conference
    Proceedings Advances in Quantum Theory 2010.

47
Acknowledgments
  • This work was supported by the Postgraduate
    Scholarship in Quantum Foundations provided by
    the Unit for HPS and Centre for Time (SOPHI) of
    the University of Sydney.
  • I am very grateful to Dean Rickles, Huw Price,
    Antony Valentini, and Hans Westman for helpful
    discussions.
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