- #176
unusualname
- 664
- 3
ok, thanks for the link, I guess you can always argue that dBB predicts same measurements as standard non-relativistic QM.
Demystifier said:Here it is:
http://xxx.lanl.gov/abs/1010.2082
It reproduces all predictions of QM. However, it is not completely local; it requires initial nonlocal correlations between the particle positions. Yet, it is much more local than standard Bohmian mechanics in the sense that nonlocal forces can be eliminated by appropriate choice of parameterization of the particle trajectories. ALL nonlocality is encoded in the initial conditions.
Demystifier said:Here it is:
http://xxx.lanl.gov/abs/1010.2082
It reproduces all predictions of QM. However, it is not completely local; it requires initial nonlocal correlations between the particle positions. Yet, it is much more local than standard Bohmian mechanics in the sense that nonlocal forces can be eliminated by appropriate choice of parameterization of the particle trajectories. ALL nonlocality is encoded in the initial conditions.
IMHO, you have not actually read the paper (only the abstract).ueit said:IMHO you are wrong ...
Demystifier said:IMHO, you have not actually read the paper (only the abstract).
To provide consistency with statistical predictions of QM, one must assume that the a priori probabilities of initial particle positions Xμ a (0) are given by (15). Thus, all nonlocality can be ascribed to initial nonlocal correlations between the particle spacetime positions.
First, you should note that "initial" in this paper refers to s=0, not to t=0. Thus, "initial" does not necessarily mean "at the big bang", or "at a spacelike hypersurface". In fact, a part of the "initial conditions" may even be in the future. See the picture on page 8 of the attachment inueit said:Why do you think that the particles having a certain distribution is a sign of non-locality? It can be a result of the Big-Bang itself, or it can be a consequence of the past interactions, prior to the beginning of the experiment.
Good analogy. If you think that way, you may think of the theory (in the paper) as being completely local.ueit said:The position/momenta of the planets are correlated, but is this evidence for non-locality? I think not.
Perhaps it is true that you will get SOME initial nonlocal correlations. But can you get initial nonlocal correlations EXACTLY EQUAL TO THOSE PREDICTED BY QM? I don't think so.ueit said:I think that the "initial nonlocal correlations" would necessarily appear in any deterministic theory of motion where particles interact at a distance and they are a direct consequence of the evolution of the system from the Big-Bang till now.
I don't know what exactly do you mean by "quantum trajectory method", but my approach does not have much in common with consistent histories of Griffiths.LukeD said:Hey hey hey! This paper exactly describes what I was talking about on page one of this thread (my third post)! This is just the Quantum Trajectory Method done relativistically. So the integral curves then do interact locally? (except for the initial conditions)
hallelujah
You should know the integral curves are continuous versions of the Consistent Histories studied by Robbert Griffiths (I had him for a class as an undergrad). It might help you to read up on them. I don't recommend his book though it's not very well written. There are only a handful of books written on the subject though.
Basically, what Griffiths concluded is that consistent histories are never unique. There are always other histories that describe the same situation, and the descriptions can never be taken to be simultaneously true. It's a perfect description of quantum complementarity
Demystifier said:Yet, the answer to your question is - yes. More precisely, different particles do not have a direct mutual interaction at all. Instead, each particle is guided by another local current. Yet, each of these currents is calculated from the common non-separable wave function.
I far as I understand it, the quantum trajectory method works only for wave equations which are first-order equations in time derivatives, and only for wave functions without spin. The relativistic Klein-Gordon equation does not satisfy the first condition, while the relativistic Dirac equation does not satisfy the second condition.LukeD said:As far as the Quantum Trajectory Method - it works in non-relativistic QM, but I don't know about relativistic QM.
OK, but in the consistent history approach no set of consistent histories takes a preferred role. So if my trajectories are one such set, there is still a plenty of other such sets, so my set does not play any particularly important role in the CH approach.LukeD said:The complete set of trajectories IS a Consistent History. It matches the mathematical definition. There is really no way around that.
Demystifier said:OK, but in the consistent history approach no set of consistent histories takes a preferred role. So if my trajectories are one such set, there is still a plenty of other such sets, so my set does not play any particularly important role in the CH approach.
I don't know any paper claiming this, that is only my own conclusion based on my superficial understanding of QT method. It seems to me that you cannot reconstruct the 2-COMPONENT wave function from trajectories and density (involving a summation over 2 components). Do you know a paper claiming the opposite?LukeD said:You said that the Quantum Trajectory Method does not work when you have spin. I don't understand why it doesn't. Could you point me towards a paper?
Much before there is Ockham's razor, which suggests, in my opinion, not to introduce entities like whole four-dimensional spacetime into existence without necessity, if a three-dimensional space does the same job equally well, and without any fatalistic implications.Demystifier said:Perhaps there is nothing wrong with it, but looks ugly. Too many possibilities are allowed, so how to know which foliation is the right one? In the absence of direct experimental evidence for a theory, simplicity and mathematical elegance should be the main guiding principles.
Demystifier said:... consider a spacetime with a horizon, e.g., a black hole. Is there a coordinate singularity at the horizon in harmonic coordinates? I am afraid there is, which constitutes a problem.