Are you familiar the double slit experiment, and the quantum wave function?
Just curious if anyone else follows Physics and Quantum Mechanics.
Yes, that's what I do for a living.
The stuff is really mind blowing and interesting.
Glad you agree.
Are you familiar the double slit experiment, and the quantum wave function?
Just curious if anyone else follows Physics and Quantum Mechanics.
The stuff is really mind blowing and interesting.
Learning about this in physics right now! I'll be getting my bachelors in physics and PhD in astrophysics. So hopefully I'm at the forefront of studying this kind of stuff.
Cool! But actually astrophysics doesn't typically use much quantum mechanics. Well, depends a lot on the type of astrophysics, anyway.
Good luck with your degree plans. I realize you're just starting out in your undergrad program, so you may well change your mind before it comes to grad school, but let me give you my universal advice for anyone considering a PhD: be aware that getting a PhD takes a VERY LONG TIME. For physicists, the average time is 6 -6.5 years after a bachelor's degree. And then, depending on what job you're trying to get, there's a 2-3 year "post doc". And things are highly competitive all along the way. So I tell students to not even start unless you are certain that's what you REALLY want to do--whether it's because of the career you want, or because you just can't help wanting to learn more.
Cool! But actually astrophysics doesn't typically use much quantum mechanics. Well, depends a lot on the type of astrophysics, anyway.
Good luck with your degree plans. I realize you're just starting out in your undergrad program, so you may well change your mind before it comes to grad school, but let me give you my universal advice for anyone considering a PhD: be aware that getting a PhD takes a VERY LONG TIME. For physicists, the average time is 6 -6.5 years after a bachelor's degree. And then, depending on what job you're trying to get, there's a 2-3 year "post doc". And things are highly competitive all along the way. So I tell students to not even start unless you are certain that's what you REALLY want to do--whether it's because of the career you want, or because you just can't help wanting to learn more.
To echo these sentiments, I would suggest getting involved as a volunteer, or a summer-student in an astrophysics lab, or any physics lab in general. You'll be working with post-docs, PhD students, people who already have their PhDs (and maybe are tenured professors)-- and get some great insight as to what their job is really like.
I really thought I was going to go for getting a PhD in either Genetics, or Cell Biology in the beginning of my undergrad. I now have been involved with a Prostate Cancer research lab (also a really cool field of science, I must say) for about a year and a half-- and I've realized that I strongly dislike it. I really enjoy some aspects of research, but I am far too restless for the meat and potatoes of it. It takes a lot of skills that don't really match my skill set, so I decided to set my sights elsewhere.
Tl;dr Had I not volunteered, and been a summer-student in a research lab, it would have taken my 6+ years of schooling to ever enter a lab-- only to realize that I hate it, and determine that I'm better off changing career plans.
So try and email a prof in your area running a physics lab, and ask him if you can get involved in it in some sort of way.
Personally I think the multiverse explanation is exceedingly lame. It takes away our freedom of choice and the consequences of actions, which I firmly believe in--both for religious reasons as well as from the evidence of my own experience.
Conversely, there's absolutely no evidence for a multiverse. There's also no current evidence for, say, string theory--but string theory at least holds the promise of one day being able to produce verifiable or falsifiable predictions. The multiverse theory does not. In my opinion it's not science, it's philosophy.
Sorry for the mini-rant.
Personally I think the multiverse explanation is exceedingly lame. It takes away our freedom of choice and the consequences of actions, which I firmly believe in--both for religious reasons as well as from the evidence of my own experience. Conversely, there's absolutely no evidence for a multiverse. There's also no current evidence for, say, string theory--but string theory at least holds the promise of one day being able to produce verifiable or falsifiable predictions. The multiverse theory does not. In my opinion it's not science, it's philosophy.
Sorry for the mini-rant.
Do you think its possible we are living in a holographic universe?
I personally am very skeptical of the existence of free will, and thus I'm not disturbed by the implication of the many-worlds hypothesis. However, personal feelings have nothing to do with whether something is true. We either live in a multiverse, or we don't. Nothing can change that.
Okay, I'll present my own mini-rant in response, but remember that I'm also playing the devil's advocate on some level. I think the multiverse is a great explanation of QM, but It may turn out not to be true.
Since the Enlightenment, science has been seen as the pursuit to understand the universe's true nature. But with QM, physics suddenly became only a mathematical tool used to predict outcomes of experiments. It has nothing to do with physical reality at all! And why? Just because QM resists falsifiable interpretations by its nature, we are supposed to accept that no interpretation of that bizarre world is needed. Just shut up and calculate! Screw that.
I think it's perfectly scientific to pick the most correct theory based on its explanatory power compared to other available theories. The multiverse offers the best explanation for why things behave in that strange way in quantum physics. MWI (many worlds interpretation) is the most direct way of understanding Schrodinger's Equation since the equation is ALWAYS satisfied. No collapse upon observation, just decoherence due to interaction with the environment in one instance, but the function maintains its coherence on a global level. Brilliant! MWI also resolves ALL the correlation paradoxes present in QM. What other interpretation can do that?
A more practical example that challenges mainstream QM thinking (like Copenhagen Interpretation) is quantum computers. A classical computer will take a very long time to factorise a product of two large prime numbers. A quantum computer will do it in no time. How can that be explained without a perfectly causal physical mechanism predicating the outcome of quantum observations? We can use such examples to weigh different interpretation's explanatory powers. And MWI emerges as the best interpretation. So it is reasonable to at least consider it to be probably true.
I don't understand why you are so hung up on the collapse of the wavefunction. There's nothing mystical about it, and I don't see any paradoxes. It's just that when quantum objects interact with other objects then they can either (a) entangle, or (b) not entangle.* And if they don't entangle, then they interact via one of their eigenstates. We don't need any "everything that can possibly happen does happen" explanation. Especially one that has the HUGE corollary that free will doesn't exist. YOU might not believe in free will, but it serves as the basis for (among other things) our entire criminal legal system. I don't think a judge will possibly buy an argument that goes "sorry, but in an alternate universe I didn't shoot the guy".
And quantum computers do not at all violate mainstream QM thinking at all. I'm not even sure what you are trying to say with that paragraph. And for what it's worth I've been doing quantum computing research since Jan 2000 (spin properties of electrons in semiconductors) and have attended literally hundreds of talks on the quantum computing over the past 13 years.
* Later edit - Actually, I remember reading an article (Physics Today?) that discussed wavefunction collapse and made the compelling case that the collapse of the wavefunction is an artifact of limiting the scope of what you are describing mathematically. If the QM system includes what's doing the "measuring" then there is no wavefunction collapse. So any theory that exists solely to explain wavefunction collapses is completely unnecessary, in my opinion.
Secondly, and more importantly, what does free will have to do with what we're talking about? The more agnostic approach of QM offers no more support for the idea of free will than MWI does. The laws of physics are precisely the same in both frameworks. WMI simply offers and explanation of what we see. But what we see says nothing about free will. So I don't understand why you keep speaking as if adopting a certain interpretation of QM would somehow turn society on its head.
You're acting like a judge sentences a criminal because he thinks the criminal committed the crime in all possible universes...
Maybe things have changed since I last read about it, but I believe many worlds says that when a choice is made, BOTH outcomes happen.
Maybe things have changed since I last read about it, but I believe many worlds says that when a choice is made, BOTH outcomes happen. One in our universe, and one in an alternate universe that spins off from us. Thus there ARE no real choices, there is only the randomness of which universe we happen to end up in.
No, just the opposite. I'm saying the criminal did NOT commit the crime in all possible universes. So, if a criminal only committed the crime in our universe because of the randomness of which universe we happen to be in, and didn't commit it in an alternate universe, then how is it just to punish him for that act?
There is an argument to be made that given the molecular structure of an individual brain, and the differences from other brains, and the differences in environment and situation that each brain is placed in, that every choice is determinable if you could perfectly understand all variables associated with thought, both biological and environmental. In other words, I think you could make an argument that free will really does not exist and is merely the output of a very very complex program running on hyper-complex computational equipment, and if you could understand all those variables you could within a very tight tolerance predict future decisions that an individual would make.