The Montevideo Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics: A Short Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction: The Measurement Problem
- Since the evolution of the system plus environment plus measuring device is unitary, it could happen that the quantum coherence of the system being studied could be recovered. Model calculations show that such “revivals” could happen, but they would take a long time for most realistic measuring devices. However, it is therefore clear that the picture that emerges is slightly different from the traditional formulation where one can never dial back a reduction. A possible answer is that for most real experimental situations, one would have to wait longer than the age of the universe. Related to this is the point of when exactly does the measurement take place? Since all quantum states throughout the evolution are unitarily equivalent, what distinguishes the moment when the measurement takes place? Some have put this as: “in this picture nothing ever happens”. A possible response is that after a certain amount of time, the state of the system is indistinguishable from the result of a reduction “for all practical purposes” (FAPP) [5]. However, from a conceptual point of view, the formulation of a theory should not rely on practical aspects. One could imagine that future scientists could perhaps find more accurate ways of measuring things and be able to distinguish what today is “FAPP” indistinguishable from a reduction.A related point is that one can define global observables for the system plus measuring device plus environment [3,6]. The expectation value for one of these observables takes different values if a collapse takes place or not. That could allow in principle to distinguish the FAPP picture of decoherence from a real collapse. From the FAPP perspective, the answer is that these types of observables are very difficult to measure, since this requires measuring the many degrees of freedom of the environment. However, the mere possibility of measuring these observables is not consistent with a realistic description. This point has recently been highlighted by Frauchiger and Renner [7], who show that quantum mechanics is inconsistent with single world interpretations.
- The “and/or” problem [8]: Even though the interaction with the environment creates a reduced density matrix for the system that has an approximate diagonal form, as all quantum states, the density matrix still represents a superposition of coexisting alternatives. Why is one to interpret it as exclusive alternatives with given probabilities? When is one to transition from an improper to a proper mixture, in d’Espagnat’s terminology [3].The Montevideo interpretation [9] seeks to address these two criticisms. In the spirit of the decoherence program, it examines more finely what is happening in a measurement and how the theory is being formulated. It also brings into play the role of gravity in physics. It may be surprising that gravity has something to do with the formulation of quantum mechanics as one can imagine many systems where quantum effects are very important, but gravity seems to play no role. However, if one believes in the unity of physics, it should not be surprising that at some level, one needs to include all of physics to make certain situations work. More importantly, gravity brings to bear on physics important limitations on what can be done. Non-gravitational physics allows one to consider in principle arbitrarily large amounts of energy in a confined region, which is clearly not feasible physically if one includes gravity. This in particular places limitations on the accuracy with which we can measure any physical quantity [10,11]. Gravity also imposes limitations on our notions of space and time, which are absolute in non-gravitational physics. In particular, one has to construct measurements of space and time using real physical (and in this context, really quantum) objects, as no externally-defined space-time is pre-existent. This forces subtle changes in how theories are formulated. In particular, unitary theories do not appear to behave entirely unitarily since the notion of unitary evolution is defined with respect to a perfect classical time that cannot be approximated with arbitrary accuracy by a real (quantum) clock [12,13]. Notice that the role of gravity in this approach is different than in Penrose’s [14]. Here, the emphasis is on limitations to clocks due to the intrinsically relational nature of time in gravity, whereas in Penrose’s differences in time in different places is what is the basis of the mechanism.
2. Quantum Mechanics without an External Time
3. Completing Decoherence: The Montevideo Interpretation
3.1. Decoherence with Clocks Based on Physical Variables
3.1.1. Zurek’s Model
- The quantum coherence is still there. Although a quantum system interacting with an environment with many degrees of freedom will very likely give the appearance that the initial quantum coherence of the system is lost (the density matrix of the measurement device is almost diagonal), the information about the original superposition could be recovered for instance carrying out a measurement that includes the environment. The fact that such measurements are hard to carry out in practice does not prevent the issue from existing as a conceptual problem.
- The “and/or problem”: Since the density matrix has been obtained by tracing over the environment, it represents an improper, not proper, mixture: looking at Equation (12), there is no way to select (even in some conceptual sense) one of the components of the density matrix versus the others.
3.1.2. A More Realistic Model and Real Clocks
3.2. Why the Solution Is Not FAPP
3.3. The Problem of Outcomes, Also Known as the Issue of Macro-Objectification
4. Some Philosophical Implications
5. Summary
Author Contributions
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Gambini, R.; Pullin, J. The Montevideo Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics: A Short Review. Entropy 2018, 20, 413. https://doi.org/10.3390/e20060413
Gambini R, Pullin J. The Montevideo Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics: A Short Review. Entropy. 2018; 20(6):413. https://doi.org/10.3390/e20060413
Chicago/Turabian StyleGambini, Rodolfo, and Jorge Pullin. 2018. "The Montevideo Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics: A Short Review" Entropy 20, no. 6: 413. https://doi.org/10.3390/e20060413
APA StyleGambini, R., & Pullin, J. (2018). The Montevideo Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics: A Short Review. Entropy, 20(6), 413. https://doi.org/10.3390/e20060413