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Maui
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Is the interaction with the Higgs field helping/causing the process of decoherence?
Maui said:Is the interaction with the Higgs field helping/causing the process of decoherence?
Maui said:Is the interaction with the Higgs field helping/causing the process of decoherence?
limarodessa said:Decoherence? Why ? How ?
I think this Higgs boson discovery poses more challenges to having a realistic and comprehensible ontological picture of reality. Nothing in it reminds even remotely of what common people in the street expect of this mass gaining mechanism. It pushes us even further away from the falimilar classical concepts and now we have even more evidence that the weirdness is correct.Raekwon said:In short, yes. Any interaction with any field will cause decoherence. In this case, it'll be very weak.
Maui said:What why? Field interactions cause decoherence, that's how coherent superpositional states supposedly lose their coherence.
This
approach considers the closed system that includes the
measured subsystem, the measuring device, the observer Р
in short, all theUniverse, the whole world. Accordingly, there
is no decoherence, and there is nothing to transform the
superposition of alternative pure states into a mixture.
limarodessa said:
Raekwon said:... Any interaction with any field will cause decoherence. In this case, it'll be very weak.
Maui said:... Field interactions cause decoherence, that's how coherent superpositional states supposedly lose their coherence.
Up to now, the lifetime of experimentally demonstrated entangled states has been limited due to their fragility under decoherence and dissipation. Therefore, they are created under strict isolation conditions. In contrast, new approaches harness the coupling of the system to the environment, which drives the system into the desired state. Following these ideas, we present a robust method for generating steady-state entanglement between two distant atomic ensembles. The proposed scheme relies on the interaction of the two atomic systems with the common vacuum modes of an electromagnetic field which act as an engineered environment. We develop the theoretical framework for two-level systems, including dipole-dipole interactions, and complement it by considering its implementation in multilevel ground states. Based on these results, the realization of entanglement generation by engineered dissipation has been experimentally demonstrated
We propose a method to generate the entangled quantum states of a field via the nonresonant interaction of a two-level atom with a two-mode field. When the detuning between the atomic transition frequency and the frequency of each mode is much larger than the coupling constant, the photon statistical distribution of the field will not be changed during the interaction of the atom with the field, while the phase of the field will evolve with time. By state-selective measurements on the atom, we can produce the entangled coherentstates of the field if the two modes of the field are both in the coherentstates initially. Entanglements of other states can also be generated by this method.
How do entagled states relate to decoherence? AFAIK, entanglement 'link' is not lost due to decoherence, as the paired particles(their correlated properties) were never in superposition(i could be wrong depending on the interpretation). What are you trying to say?limarodessa said:
Maui said:How do entagled states relate to decoherence? AFAIK, entanglement 'link' is not lost due to decoherence, as the paired particles(their correlated properties) were never in superposition(i could be wrong depending on the interpretation).
You mean i am the only one NOT in superposition? Because that follows from that premise, since as far as we know, a human body can't function while in superposition.Fiziqs said:I'm confused, isn't every particle, whether it's entangled or not, in a state of superposition?
Doesn't HUP imply that until we measure it, every particle is in a state of superposition, and doesn't the double slit experiment merely demonstrate the validity of this point?
Not necessarily, there are things about which you can know their state, without actually having to observe them. For instance, if you roll a six on a regular die, then you know without looking that there is a one on the bottom. In a sense the two things are entangled. Knowing the state of one will automatically tell you the state of the other. Or if you put a penny, heads up, in a box and close the lid, if you do nothing to disturb the box then you know that heads will still be up when you open the lid again. So there are things that can be known based upon their relationship to something else, and there are things that can be known based upon the state that they were in, in the past. Things must be temporally consistent. How they are now must be consistent with how they were in the past. (And possibly the future, but that's another discussion entirely)Maui said:You mean i am the only one NOT in superposition? Because that follows from that premise, since as far as we know, a human body can't function while in superposition.
It's too conspirational to suppose otherwise. Here is the best experiment to date with large, almost classical obejcts(430-atom molecules) that had to be isolated from the environment to demonstrate quantum behavior:And what about a simple particle, is one particle interacting with a system about which you have no knowledge, and from which you gain no knowledge via the interaction, also sufficient to destroy the superposition relative to you? The simple answer is, we don't know.
The Higgs field is a fundamental field in physics that permeates all of space. It is responsible for giving particles their mass through interactions with the Higgs boson.
The Higgs field is thought to play a role in the phenomenon of decoherence, which is the loss of quantum coherence and transition to classical behavior. Some theories suggest that the Higgs field may be responsible for "measuring" quantum states and causing decoherence.
While the Higgs field is responsible for giving particles their mass, it cannot fully explain the origin of mass in the universe. The Higgs field itself requires a certain amount of energy to exist, so it does not provide a complete answer to the question of mass in the universe.
There is currently no direct evidence for a connection between the Higgs field and decoherence. However, some theoretical models and experiments have suggested a potential link between the two phenomena.
Exploring the connection between the Higgs field and decoherence can provide insights into the fundamental nature of our universe. It can also help us better understand the behavior of quantum systems and potentially lead to new technologies and advancements in quantum computing and communication.