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Greetings !
Here's an example by Steven Weinberg I read sometime
ago (in SciAm I think):
Imagine a light beam coming from a quasar billions of
light years away. It encounters galaxy superclusters
on the way and is split so that gravitational lensing
is observed when we look at the quasar from the Earth.
Now, let's take the uncollapsed WFs of photons in the beam.
We now have the choice of detecting the photons in
a 1 or 2 slit (as in the double-slit experiment) configuration.
If we choose to use a single slit and aim at one of the images
we'll collapse the WF of the photon (let's say we have
just 2 images). If we use two slits we'll collapse it and
get the ussual difraction pattern.
If we try to interpret these results it appears abvious
that we've decided upon the path - if any, that the photon
took during all these billions of years.
The above example is of course interesting in its own right,
and was used by Weinberg for emphasis of some of the "conscious
mind" stuff in various interpretations of QM. However, I'll be
using it in this post in a somewhat different way,
and want to inquire about physics rather than its
interpretations (though separating the two is not
that easy at this point).
First let's suppose that our 2 WF splits are both trapped
for a while in an orbit around two different black holes,
before they reach us. Let's further assume that the
light beam is extremely intense. So much that such
an amount of light at a close orbit would be able to affect
the BHs.
Now let's play the "what if" game:
The BH's are affected by the light (the WFs of
some of the photons in the beam will have to collapse for that
to happen, I guess) and we detect the shifts in its
radiation due to these gravitational distortions
before the quasar's beam reaches us.
Now, let's say that some WFs did not collapse. I assume
we'll agree that these will not affect the BHs initially ?
And now, we run one of the above versions of the experiment.
What will happen in each case ?
Thanks !
Live long and prosper.
Here's an example by Steven Weinberg I read sometime
ago (in SciAm I think):
Imagine a light beam coming from a quasar billions of
light years away. It encounters galaxy superclusters
on the way and is split so that gravitational lensing
is observed when we look at the quasar from the Earth.
Now, let's take the uncollapsed WFs of photons in the beam.
We now have the choice of detecting the photons in
a 1 or 2 slit (as in the double-slit experiment) configuration.
If we choose to use a single slit and aim at one of the images
we'll collapse the WF of the photon (let's say we have
just 2 images). If we use two slits we'll collapse it and
get the ussual difraction pattern.
If we try to interpret these results it appears abvious
that we've decided upon the path - if any, that the photon
took during all these billions of years.
The above example is of course interesting in its own right,
and was used by Weinberg for emphasis of some of the "conscious
mind" stuff in various interpretations of QM. However, I'll be
using it in this post in a somewhat different way,
and want to inquire about physics rather than its
interpretations (though separating the two is not
that easy at this point).
First let's suppose that our 2 WF splits are both trapped
for a while in an orbit around two different black holes,
before they reach us. Let's further assume that the
light beam is extremely intense. So much that such
an amount of light at a close orbit would be able to affect
the BHs.
Now let's play the "what if" game:
The BH's are affected by the light (the WFs of
some of the photons in the beam will have to collapse for that
to happen, I guess) and we detect the shifts in its
radiation due to these gravitational distortions
before the quasar's beam reaches us.
Now, let's say that some WFs did not collapse. I assume
we'll agree that these will not affect the BHs initially ?
And now, we run one of the above versions of the experiment.
What will happen in each case ?
Thanks !
Live long and prosper.
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