Relational evolution with oscillating clocks
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2110.07702v1
- Date: Thu, 14 Oct 2021 20:26:40 GMT
- Title: Relational evolution with oscillating clocks
- Authors: Martin Bojowald, Luiz Martinez, Garrett Wendel
- Abstract summary: Unitary evolution does not require a monotonic clock variable.
Because the clock and an evolving system have a common conserved energy, the clock is in different cycles for different energy eigenstates of the system state.
Coherence is almost maintained over long time scales provided the clock period is much smaller than the system period.
- Score: 0.0
- License: http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/
- Abstract: A fundamental description of time can be consistent not only with the usual
monotonic behavior but also with a periodic physical clock variable, coupled to
the degrees of freedom of a system evolving in time. Generically, one would in
fact expect some kind of oscillating motion of a system that is dynamical and
interacts with its surroundings, as required for a fundamental clock that can
be noticed by any other system. Unitary evolution does not require a monotonic
clock variable and can be achieved more generally by formally unwinding the
periodic clock movement, keeping track not only of the value of the clock
variable but also of the number of cycles it has gone through at any moment. As
a result, the clock is generically in a quantum state with a superposition of
different clock cycles, a key feature that distinguishes oscillating clocks
from monotonic time. Because the clock and an evolving system have a common
conserved energy, the clock is in different cycles for different energy
eigenstates of the system state. Coherence could therefore be lost faster than
observed, for instance if a system that would be harmonic in isolation is made
anharmonic by interactions with a fundamental clock, implying observational
bounds on fundamental clocks. Numerical computations show that coherence is
almost maintained over long time scales provided the clock period is much
smaller than the system period. Since the precision of atomic clocks could not
be achieved if atomic frequencies would be subject to additional variations
from coupling to a fundamental clock, an upper bound on the clock period can be
obtained that turns out to be much smaller than currently available direct or
indirect measurements of time. (abbreviated)
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