Information versus Physicality: On the Nature of the Wavefunctions of Quantum Mechanics
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2506.09062v1
- Date: Fri, 06 Jun 2025 08:33:17 GMT
- Title: Information versus Physicality: On the Nature of the Wavefunctions of Quantum Mechanics
- Authors: C. S. Unnikrishnan,
- Abstract summary: I show that the starting assumption in the PBR argument, of associating a wavefunction with a distribution of physical states, is flawed.<n>I show that the considerations in the PBR paper, involving a standard process of the preparation and projective measurements of quantum states, cannot address the ontological status of the wavefunctions in space and time.
- Score: 0.0
- License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
- Abstract: The physical states of matter and fields are represented in the quantum theory with complex valued wavefunctions, or more generally by quantum states in an abstract linear vector space. Determining the physical nature of wavefunctions remains an open problem that is at the very core of quantum mechanics, About a decade ago, Pusey, Barrett and Rudolf (PBR) claimed to prove an ontologically real status of wavefunctions by ruling out $\psi$-epistemic models. The result was obtained by associating wavefunctions to hypothetical distributions of notional physical states, and by examining whether some physical states were associated with more than one wavefunction, a criterion they chose for defining a wavefunction as `epistemic'. I show that the starting assumption in the PBR argument, of associating a wavefunction with a distribution of physical states, is flawed and contradictory to the linear structure of quantum mechanics coupled with its quadratic Born's rule. Since none of the axioms or calculations of observable statistical results in the standard quantum theory depends on specifying the physical nature of a $\psi$-function, the considerations in the PBR paper, involving a standard process of the preparation and projective measurements of quantum states, cannot address the ontological status of the wavefunctions in space and time.
Related papers
- On the complex zeros of the wavefunction [0.5242869847419834]
We study the zeros of such wavefunctions and give them a novel information-theoretic interpretation.<n>Our results show that the non-Gaussian features of bosonic quantum systems are encoded in the zeros of their wavefunction.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2025-07-31T11:46:04Z) - Does Quantum Information Require Additional Structure? [0.0]
We introduce the hypothesis of quantum space of directly unobserved relations, which precede quantum correlations, and are compatible with the Reichenbach common cause principle.<n>We present the Chyli'nski model as an example of quantum relational space continuum, which predicts potentially measurable effects for the bound states.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-08-20T20:39:20Z) - Deriving the Born Rule from a model of the quantum measurement process [0.0]
The quantum mechanics postulate called the Born Rule attributes a probabilistic meaning to a wave function.<n>This paper derives the Born from other quantum principles along with a model of the measurement process.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-08-08T12:10:26Z) - A Theory of Quantum Jumps [44.99833362998488]
We study fluorescence and the phenomenon of quantum jumps'' in idealized models of atoms coupled to the quantized electromagnetic field.
Our results amount to a derivation of the fundamental randomness in the quantum-mechanical description of microscopic systems.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-04-16T11:00:46Z) - Universality of critical dynamics with finite entanglement [68.8204255655161]
We study how low-energy dynamics of quantum systems near criticality are modified by finite entanglement.
Our result establishes the precise role played by entanglement in time-dependent critical phenomena.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-01-23T19:23:54Z) - The Bethe-Salpeter QED wave equation for bound-state computations of
atoms and molecules [0.0]
Quantum electrodynamics has been established by the mid-twentieth century, primarily as a scattering theory.
bound states can be efficiently computed using robust and general methodologies.
A computational framework, with initial applications and future challenges in relation with precision spectroscopy, is also highlighted.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-11-04T11:47:29Z) - Schr\"odinger cat states of a 16-microgram mechanical oscillator [54.35850218188371]
The superposition principle is one of the most fundamental principles of quantum mechanics.
Here we demonstrate the preparation of a mechanical resonator with an effective mass of 16.2 micrograms in Schr"odinger cat states of motion.
We show control over the size and phase of the superposition and investigate the decoherence dynamics of these states.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-11-01T13:29:44Z) - Quantum probability from temporal structure [0.0]
The Born probability measure describes the statistics of measurements in which observers self-locate themselves in some region of reality.
We show that quantum probabilities may be identified with fractions of a universal multiple-time wavefunction containing both causal and retrocausal temporal parts.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-12-21T01:33:09Z) - A realistic model for completing Quantum Mechanics [0.0]
In Copenhagen the physical objects and the experimental results can be described only in a macroscopic language.
The measurement problem is at the center of these difficulties, mainly because it requires the introduction of the reduction process of the wave function.
We build up and propose a model which is able to solve the measurement problem and all the other difficulties which, in a way or in another, are related to it.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-04-26T16:41:41Z) - Quantum Hall phase emerging in an array of atoms interacting with
photons [101.18253437732933]
Topological quantum phases underpin many concepts of modern physics.
Here, we reveal that the quantum Hall phase with topological edge states, spectral Landau levels and Hofstadter butterfly can emerge in a simple quantum system.
Such systems, arrays of two-level atoms (qubits) coupled to light being described by the classical Dicke model, have recently been realized in experiments with cold atoms and superconducting qubits.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-03-18T14:56:39Z) - Probing the Universality of Topological Defect Formation in a Quantum
Annealer: Kibble-Zurek Mechanism and Beyond [46.39654665163597]
We report on experimental tests of topological defect formation via the one-dimensional transverse-field Ising model.
We find that the quantum simulator results can indeed be explained by the KZM for open-system quantum dynamics with phase-flip errors.
This implies that the theoretical predictions of the generalized KZM theory, which assumes isolation from the environment, applies beyond its original scope to an open system.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-01-31T02:55:35Z) - External and internal wave functions: de Broglie's double-solution
theory? [77.34726150561087]
We propose an interpretative framework for quantum mechanics corresponding to the specifications of Louis de Broglie's double-solution theory.
The principle is to decompose the evolution of a quantum system into two wave functions.
For Schr"odinger, the particles are extended and the square of the module of the (internal) wave function of an electron corresponds to the density of its charge in space.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-01-13T13:41:24Z)
This list is automatically generated from the titles and abstracts of the papers in this site.
This site does not guarantee the quality of this site (including all information) and is not responsible for any consequences.