PolyHedral
Superabacus Mystic
That's not how the wave in question works.It is something we are familiar with that is why we call it a wave.
Welcome to Religious Forums, a friendly forum to discuss all religions in a friendly surrounding.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to the following site features:We hope to see you as a part of our community soon!
That's not how the wave in question works.It is something we are familiar with that is why we call it a wave.
That's not how the wave in question works.
Maybe not but familiar. Thermal light responds appropriately.
Well what a photon is supposed to really be goes beyond the point. A photon is a packet and it doesn't just suddenly spread out from its packet form but whatever its emitting has a range. At what distance do the slits stop catching the wave function?Why do we still refer to Newton's law of gravity even though it's not a law? Not only that, we know it's wrong? Why do we use equations like F=ma when we know they're wrong too? Mostly convenience. It is convenient to use Newton's gravitational constant because the approximation we end up with is usually good enough and far easier than trying to obtain almost the exact same result using spacetime curvature. It's also much easier to use when teaching physics than having to talk about 4D Minkowski space to a high school physics class.
Likewise, it is more convenient to refer to light as a wave when we are talking about visible light and/or the electromagnetic spectrum, just as it is more convenient to refer to particles when we are talking about photons (which, by definition, are localized).
Newton's law remains wrong even though we use it, and light is neither a wave or a particle even though we refer to light waves and to photons (discrete "particles" of light).
A photon is a packet and it doesn't just suddenly spread out from its packet form but whatever its emitting has a range. At what distance do the slits stop catching the wave function?
This article gives a good description where they are shaping photons but it still exists in a single point in time and space, the shape is the probability, the wave function. Site has a cool picture too it looks like a wave.A packet here means a quantized "portion" of light or a unit of light. How big is this unit? After all, if we're saying it doesn't spread out, we need to know how large it is. if I spread out a tablecloth, I don't say it is nonlocal or something just because it is spread over some area. However, I don't expect that each time I use this tablecloth the size changes. It has only one value for the amount of area it covers. Does a photon? No.
So as you can't tell me, like you could with a tablecloth, how much area on a detection screen a wave packet of light (a photon) has. Which means that when you point to a dots on some detection screen and say "see? Photons aren't spread out, because they cover this specific amount of area" I can show you this isn't true because I can change how localized (how much area is covered when each photon hits the screen) the photons are.
In other words, if you assert that photons aren't spread out, then (just like a tablecloth on a table or a paintball shot at a target) a photon has a certain area it will occupy when we detect it. You can't show this. So how can you show me a wave packet/photon "doesn't just suddenly spread out" when you can't tell me what the spread of the packet is/photon is to begin with?
This article gives a good description where they are shaping photons but it still exists in a single point in time and space, the shape is the probability, the wave function. Site has a cool picture too it looks like a wave.
Physics - Shaping Single Photons
Actually, I just missed it. Legion, have you read post #646?...I was just about to post asking Legion if he'd seen a response I made, but apparently I made it in the universe next door. Oops.
That's great when you were saying I couldn't show it was spread out. I showed it.That is a journal published by APS (American Physical Society) intended specifically to summarize and simplify experiments published in full in another APS journal. In this case, the article was talking about the study "Electro-Optic Modulation of Single Photons", published in Phy. Rev. Lett. 101 (if you look at the top right-hand corner of the page you linked to, you'll see the study name and the citation information.
This is the first line from the actual study itself: "This Letter demonstrates how single photons may be modulated so as to produce photon wave functions whose amplitude and phase are functions of time."
The study your article is reporting/talking about absolutely did not show anything about photons being single points. The opposite is true. They are quite clear about what experiment they did and why: "The technique provides the technology for studying the response of atoms to shaped single-photon waveforms on a time scale comparable to the natural linewidth."
A single-photon waveform means that the photon was spread out like a wave. It wasn't localized at a point.
I have. I started to respond a few times, but gave up, because some extremely basic aspects of linear algebra, function spaces, fields, etc., seemed to be unfamiliar to you (perhaps you don't use them regularly, and like everyone else knowledge tends to fade). You stated that you couldn't imagine functions being defined differently. That is so basic high school students are taught some of the differences. And I outlined in detail problems with your posts here.Actually, I just missed it. Legion, have you read post #646?
For instance: I say that a vector space, V<F> over some field F is not itself a field. You respond with this section. This is very informative, but it does not actually answer my point, AFAIK - it does not tell me if V is a field or not.
So why are your responses not matching what I've said?
I don't see how you can possibly define addition, subtraction, multiplication and division differently for real/complex-valued functions in any useful way.
So prove it.But that is not an approximation at all, unlike if we were working with an arbitary function. In the case of an n-degree polynomial, the equality is exact, and I can prove that to you if I have to. The above equation is (the definition of!) a polynomial, not an approximation or converging series.
Wrong.However,
Any set of vectors of any dimension which contains precisely 2 linearly independent members will span R^2
Making sense out of the double slit and other mysterious things:
Most physicists say that it went through both slits as a wave, and its particle nature is not there until it is detected. All you need to make sense out of it is the tunneling-like magic. You do not need the additional magic of the particle nature being absent as the wave passes through the double slit. You can say that a particle going toward a double slit may go through one or the other, but its wave goes through both. The particle can jump around anywhere in its wave, and the square of the wave is the probability of finding it in any location. Is it doing all this jumping around as it travels through space? It doesn't hurt to picture it that way, but all we can say from the evidence is that the probability of its location where it will be detected is governed by its wave. (And of course its wave nature immediately changes upon detection- the "collapse of the wave function." The wave is nature's expression of the randomness, and the randomness of its location necessarily disappears when it is detected.)
Intuitively, a field is a set F that is a commutative group with respect to two compatible operations, addition and multiplication, with "compatible" being formalized by distributivity, and the caveat that the additive identity (0) has no multiplicative inverse (one cannot divide by 0).What is a field?
So which multiple of two is equal to the multiplicative inverse?However, a subset of the natural numbers does. Simply construct a set that consists of all multiples of 2 (including 2 * 1). Now you have both the necessary additive properties and inverse properties.
It asks if the set V has specific properties and functions.When you ask, "Is V a field?" then your question is basically meaningless.
Closure of F under addition and multiplicationA vector space can be a field because scalar multiplication and vector addition satisfy the necessary operations over the set of all vectors in that space.
That gives you the additive, not multiplicative inverse.Things like the multiplicative inverse become easy. All we need is an arbitrary scalar that maps a vector to the coordinate set of an arbitrary point multiplied by -1
The addition of functions I had in mind was,Such operators on trig functions are different even though they are real-valued. Basic single-variable calculus requires specific rules for multiplication and division of functions. What you can't "possibly see" is high school mathematics or beginning college mathematics.
I'll get back to you on that. It's late.So prove it.
Wrong.
Why? Two linearly indepedent n-dimensional vectors will span a 2D subspace of nD space, will be homeomorphic to R^2 if the original space was homeomorphic to R^n.Completely wrong. In fact, it is so off target that you cannot use linear algebra, complex analysis, or anything that refers to dimensions and/or vectors if you think that statement is true.
You are smart guy. Probably a lot smarter than I am.
You've misunderstood.But whether you had bad teachers or you are just out of practice, you have fundamentally misrepresented the basics.
They are not identical.
(If they were, the difference would be the additive identity.)
Scalars are not in the set V
Intuitively, a field is a set F
The way you write this it sounds as if there is one multiplicative inverse for the entire set. I'm not sure if that's what you mean, but just in case every element in the set would have to have a unique multiplicative inverse. However, it doesn't have to be 1 and you don't even need numbers. I can't recall what my point as for using the example of multiples of 2 and I know I meant integers not natural numbers (you actually can construct a field rather easily out of the integers using prime numbers to any n collection you wish), but the point was to get at this:So which multiple of two is equal to the multiplicative inverse?
You've used three different phrasings to describe this so far:
- "You do realize that a vector space is, by definition, a field over some set of vectors, right?"
- "a linear vector space over the field K"
- an assignment of a vector F(P) to each point P.
It asks if the set V has specific properties and functions.
That gives you the additive, not multiplicative inverse.
The addition of functions I had in mind was
It's also the only sensible way I know of to define addition of functions.
Why?
Emphases added. The first sentence in bold is clearly a non-sequitur. Otherwise you've simply defined out of existence a physically real, indeterminate system! That begs the question. I posited by assumption the existence of a physical system which does not obey deterministic laws of evolution. When we entertain this possibility, rather than rejecting it by assumption, there is a fourth option in your second paragraph: the physical system does not have a predestined evolution, and hence, naturally, our complete mathematical representation also does not have one. Or, as Griffiths put it fancifully somewhere, it's not that we don't know--God doesn't know. (BTW you switched from "predict" in the 1st para. to "describe" in the 2nd, I'm going to assume we can stick with "predict", since that is what actually captures the difference between a deterministic vs. non-deterministic evolution.)Legion said:If it is a physical system, then complete knowledge of the state entails the ability (in principle) to completely predict the systems evolution. We frequently say complex systems are indeterministic, but we mean they are deterministic in principle, but in practice we are unable to determine their dynamics.
If we can't, even in principle, describe the evolution of a physical system, then either our knowledge of the system's state is incomplete, QM is incomplete, or (the most widely accepted view) the state of the system doesn't correspond to a physical system at all, merely a mathematical device to tell us given preparation a and measurement b, we'll get outcome x with y probability.
First: if you don't think measurements are represented by operators acting on kets, you are simply wrong. It's stated unambiguously in Shankar for example, a standard graduate-level text. Perhaps it's a bit less obvious in undergrad-level texts (like Griffiths). Second: in Eq. [3.18] Griffiths says "Observables are represented by hermitian operators". You quoted this yourself. You can also read the generalized statistical interpretation Griffiths explains in Sect. 3.4. Clearly, for starters, operators correspond to measurement in some way, not in no way as you claimed.Legion said:Griffiths [is] quite clear that the operator in no way corresponds to a mathematical representation [of] physical measurement ...
What I'm hearing is that you concede Griffiths does indeed agree with the statement in question. (In the part you quoted, plain English demands it.) But Legion has objections to that interpretation, namely it's not physical, etc. And Griffiths acknowledges a number of things (namely the statistical interpretation) which you feel support your objection. Is that fair?Legion said:If you want to interpret a physical system as being nothing more than this: "All I am asserting is that there must be something- if only a list of possible outcomes of every possible experiment- associated with the system prior to measurement", then Griffiths posits we have complete knowledge of a physical system. It's not physical in any sense that we are familiar with nor with any known correspondence with anything physical, and the only thing we have are probability functions to describe the physical states of this physical system. However, if you think that what Griffiths states above (the wave function is a probability function), means that the physical system is a mathematical function that yields outcomes, then yes we do have complete knowledge of a "physical system".
Oops, I meant the multiplicative identity.:cover:The way you write this it sounds as if there is one multiplicative inverse for the entire set.
Each time I answer one of your objections
and this:This was the common understanding I was taught by 3 different professors in 3 different QM courses, using 2 different textbooks. If I made this statement at one of the physics seminars I don't think anyone would find it controversial ... but maybe I'm wrong ...
I'm just reiterating what Shankar and Griffiths say in their QM books.
In classical mechanics the mathematical representation is a list of all the positions and momenta of all the particles, i.e. a point in a 6N-dimensional phase space; in QM it's a vector in Hilbert space.
That's a pretty unassailable statement.
May I remind you that I am a physicist?
I know, from studies and experience, that the above would be an uncontroversial thing to say in front of a room full of physicists.
I know it because I've been in a building full of physicists every working day for many years now.
The first sentence in bold is clearly a non-sequitur. Otherwise you've simply defined out of existence a physically real, indeterminate system!
But what do we have complete knowledge of? It might be the physical system, as you posited, or not. But until you can demonstrate any evidence anywhere that QM posits complete knowledge of a physical system as the standard interpretation and that this physical system has a one-to-one correspondence with the mathematical representations, then statements like this:the physical system does not have a predestined evolution, and hence, naturally, our complete mathematical representation also does not have one
give me nothing.and trust me, you are mistaken on these points
I know that they are. That has nothing to do with my original issue which was the correspondence that does not exist in QM as it does in classical physics because we are describing a state that we derived from theory and preparation and postulating that the observables (represented by operators acting on kets) are the only things we can say regarding any physical properties of the system.First: if you don't think measurements are represented by operators acting on kets
You mean on page 124, in the discussion of postulates, where he says that "the system had a well-defined state-vectorIt's stated unambiguously in Shankar for example
Surely first year, though? After all, the author does say it can be used as an undergrad text.a standard graduate-level text
operators correspond to measurement in some way, not in no way as you claimed.
What I'm hearing is that you concede Griffiths does indeed agree with the statement in question