A Lazy Layman's Guide to Quantum Physics

 

James Higgo 1999

 

 

 

 

What is Quantum Physics?

That's an easy one: it's the science of things so small that the quantum nature 
of reality has an effect. Quantum means 'discrete amount' or 'portion'. Max 
Planck discovered in 1900 that you couldn't get smaller than a certain minimum 
amount of anything. This minimum amount is now called the Planck unit.

Why is it weird?

Niels Bohr, the father of the orthodox 'Copenhagen Interpretation' of quantum 
physics once said, "Anyone who is not shocked by quantum theory has not 
understood it".

To understand the weirdness completely, you just need to know about three 
experiments: Light Bulb, Two Slits, Schroedinger's Cat.

Two Slits

The simplest experiment to demonstrate quantum weirdness involves shining a 
light through two parallel slits and looking at the screen. It can be shown 
that a single photon (particle of light) can interfere with itself, as if it 
travelled through both slits at once.

Light Bulb

Imagine a light bulb filament gives out a photon, seemingly in a random 
direction. Erwin Schroedinger came up with a nine-letter-long equation that 
correctly predicts the chances of finding that photon at any given point. He 
envisaged a kind of wave, like a ripple from a pebble dropped into a pond, 
spreading out from the filament. Once you look at the photon, this 
'wavefunction' collapses into the single point at which the photon really is.

Schroedinger's Cat

In this experiment, we take your pet cat and put it in a box with a bottle of 
cyanide. We rig it up so that a detector looks at an isolated electron and 
determines whether it is 'spin up' or 'spin down' (it can have either 
characteristic, seemingly at random). If it is 'spin up', then the bottle is 
opened and the cat gets it. Ten minutes later we open the box and see if the 
cat is alive or dead. The question is: what state is the cat in between the 
detector being activated and you opening the box. Nobody has actually done this 
experiment (to my knowledge) but it does show up a paradox that arises in 
certain interpretations.

 

 

If you dare to think about it (you're not really supposed to), you have to 
believe one of the following things:

 

MENU

Your consciousness affects the behaviour of subatomic particles

- or -

Particles move backwards as well as forwards in time and appear in all possible 
places at once

- or - 

The universe is splitting, every Planck-time (10 E-43 seconds) into billions of 
parallel universes

- or -

The universe is interconnected with faster-than-light transfers of information

----

Full English Breakfast

Coffee or Tea

These are the results of the different interpretations of quantum physics. The 
interpretations all compete with each other. Otherwise respectable physicists 
can get quite heated about how sensible their pet interpretation is and how 
crazy all the others are. At the moment, there's about one new interpretation 
every three months, but most of them fit into these categories.

 

What does it mean?

The meaning of quantum physics is a bit of a taboo subject, but everyone thinks 
about it. To make it all a bit more respectable, it is better to say 'ontology' 
than 'meaning' -- it's the same thing. There are several competing 
interpretations and the one thing they all have in common is that each of them 
explains all the facts and predicts every experiment's outcome correctly.

Copenhagen Interpretation (CI)

This is the granddaddy of interpretations, championed by the formidable Niels 
Bohr of Copenhagen university. He browbeat all dissenters into submission (with 
the notable exception of Einstein) at a Brussels conference sponsored by a man 
called Solvay in 1927. Bohr thereby stifled the debate for a generation or two. 

The CI has a bit of a cheek calling itself an interpretation, because it 
essentially says "thou shalt not ask what happens before ye look". He pointed 
out that the Schroedinger equation worked as a tool for calculating where the 
particle would be, except that it 'collapsed' as soon as you took a peek. If 
anyone asked why this was, he would say, "shut up and calculate" (or he might 
as well have done).

When you do try to take Copenhagen seriously you come to the conclusion that 
consciousness and particle physics are inter-related, and you rush off to write 
a book called The Dancing Wu-Li Masters. 

More recently, Henry Stapp at the University of California has written papers 
such as On Quantum Theories of the Mind (1997). Stapp's central thesis is that 
the synapses in your brain are so small that quantum effects are significant. 
This means that there is quantum uncertainty about whether a neuron will fire 
or not - and this degree of freedom that nature has allows for the interaction 
of mind and matter.

What happens to the cat? You're not allowed to ask.

Many Worlds Interpretation (MWI)

The various paradoxes that the Copenhagen Interpretation gave rise to (famously 
Schroedinger's cat, and Einstein's dislike of "spooky action at a distance") 
led others to keep on trying to find a better interpretation. 

The simplest was put forward by a student, Hugh Everett, in 1957. He simply 
said that the Schroedinger equation does not collapse. Of course, everyone 
laughed at him, because they could see that the photon, for example, was in 
just one place when they looked, not in all possible places. But after a couple 
of decades, this issue was resolved with the concept of decoherence - the idea 
that different universes can very quickly branch apart, so that there is very 
little relationship between them after a tiny fraction of a second. 

This has led to what should strictly be called the 'post-Everett' 
Interpretation, but is still usually called MWI. It is now one of the most 
popular interpretations and has won some impromptu beauty contests at physics 
conferences. Unfortunately it means that billions of you are splitting off 
every fraction of a second into discrete universes and it implies that 
everything possible exists in one universe or another. This comes up with its 
own set of hard-to-digest concepts, such as the fact that a 500-year-old you 
exists in some universes, whereas in others you died at birth.

In 1997, Max Tegmark at Princeton University proposed an experiment to prove 
that MWI was correct. It involved pointing a loaded gun at your head and 
pulling the trigger. Of course, you will only survive in those universes where 
the gun, for whatever reason, fails to go off. If you get a misfire every time, 
you can satisfy yourself -- with an arbitrarily high level of confidence -- 
that MWI is true. Of course, in most universes your family will be weeping at 
your funeral (or possibly just shaking their heads and muttering).

What happens to the cat? It's dead in half the subsequent universes and alive 
in the other half.

Pilot Waves, Hidden Variables and the Implicate Order

David Bohm (1917-1992) was a very brilliant physicist and that's why people 
went along with him when he came up with an elegant but more complicated theory 
to explain the same set of phenomena (normally, more complicated theories are 
disqualified by the principle known as Ockham's Razor).

Bohm's theory follows on some original insights by Prince Louis de Broglie 
(1892-1987), who first studied the wave-like properties of the behaviour of 
particles in 1924. De Broglie suggested that, in addition to the normal 
wavefunction of the Copenhagen Interpretation, there is a second wave that 
determines a precise position for the particle at any particular time. In this 
theory, there is some 'hidden variable' that determines the precise position of 
the photon.

Sadly, John von Neumann (1903-1957) wrote a paper in 1932 proving that this 
theory was impossible. Von Neumann was such a great mathematician that nobody 
bothered to check his maths until 1966, when John Bell (1928-1990) proved he'd 
bodged it and there could be hidden variables after all -- but only if 
particles could communicate faster than light (this is called 'nonlocality'). 
In 1982 Alain Aspect demonstrated that this superluminal signaling did appear 
to exist, although David Mermin then showed that you could not actually signal 
anything. There is still some argument about whether this means very much.

Bohm's theory was that the second wave was indeed faster than light, and 
moreover it did not get weaker with distance but instantly permeated the entire 
universe, acting as a guide for the movement of the photon. This is why it is 
called a 'pilot wave'.

This theory explains the paradoxes of quantum physics perfectly. But it 
introduces a new faster-than-light wave and some hidden mechanism for deciding 
where it goes -- to create an 'implicate order'. That's quite a lot of extra 
baggage, and scientists like to travel light. Worse still, Bohm went on to 
become a mystic, identifying his 'implicate order' with Eastern spirituality 
and spawning books like Fritjof Capra's The Tao of Physics . That's heretical 
behaviour in the eyes of any decent physicist.

What happens to the cat? It's either dead or alive, of course!

Consistent Histories

The Consistent Histories interpretation, put forward by Robert Griffiths in 
1984, works backwards from the result of an experiment, arguing that only a few 
possible histories are consistent with the rules of quantum mechanics. It's an 
interesting idea but not very popular because it still doesn't explain how a 
particle can go through two slits and interfere with itself. Roland Omns, in 
The Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics (1994) wrote down 80 equations in a 
single chapter and came to the conclusion that the 'consistent histories' 
interpretation was pretty much the same as Copenhagen, with a few knobs on.

What happens to the Cat? Again, you're not supposed to ask.

Alternate Histories

The Alternate Histories Interpretation is quite different, being similar to the 
Many-Worlds Interpretation, but with the insistence that only the actual 
outcome is the real world and the ones we're not in don't actually exist. 
Unfortunately this gets us right back to their being some kind of 'collapse'.

What happens to the cat? Again, you're not supposed to ask.

Time Reversibility

Richard Feynman (1918-1988) was a genius who developed a new approach to 
quantum mechanics. He formalised its crowning achievement, Quantum 
Electrodynamics, which is the most accurate scientific theory ever devised. He 
also developed the Feynman Diagram, which represents the interaction of two 
particles as the exchange of a third particle. This diagram has time on one 
axis and space on the other and the interaction can be viewed as happening both 
in forward and in reverse time.

An electron, on its way from point A to point B, can bump into a photon. In the 
diagram this can be drawn as sending it backwards not just in space, but also 
in time. Then it bumps into another photon, which sends it forward in time 
again, but in a different direction in space. In this way, it can be in two 
places at once.

There is little doubt that a Feynman diagram offers the easiest way to predict 
the results of a subatomic experiment. Many physicists have seen the power of 
this tool and taken the next step, arguing that reverse time travel is what 
actually happens in reality. Victor Stenger of the University of Hawaii argues 
strongly for this ontology in his forthcoming book. Of course, for a layman, it 
is hard to understand why a photon bounces around in such a way that it appears 
in two slits at once.

What happens to the Cat? It is both dead and alive simultaneously. We don't see 
this because of the macroscopic 'measurement problem'.

Transactional Interpretation

Like Stenger's, John Cramer's Transactional Interpretation relies on the 
fundamental time-symmetry of the universe. He argues that particles perform a 
kind of 'handshake' in the course of interacting. One sends out a wave forward 
in time, and another sends one out backwards in time.

What happens to the Cat? Ermm...

Gremlins

A new interpretation, presented for the first time here, is that there are 
little green gremlins hovering around, going backwards and forwards in time, 
shaking hands and collapsing with mirth as they poke and prod subatomic 
particles in a way they calculate most likely to confuse us. This explains all 
of the observed experimental results, but it does introduce gremlins, and the 
need for a further theory about why they should want to confuse us. Using the 
principle of Ockham's razor, this interpretation will probably not find much 
popularity among the scientific community although it may be the basis for a 
new religion. Watch this space.

What happens to the Cat? Depends on what the gremlins think will confuse us 
most.

  
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