995,839 research outputs found
Time-of-Arrival States
Although one can show formally that a time-of-arrival operator cannot exist,
one can modify the low momentum behaviour of the operator slightly so that it
is self-adjoint. We show that such a modification results in the difficulty
that the eigenstates are drastically altered. In an eigenstate of the modified
time-of-arrival operator, the particle, at the predicted time-of-arrival, is
found far away from the point of arrival with probability 1/2.Comment: 15 pages, 2 figure
Differentiability of the arrival time
For a monotonically advancing front, the arrival time is the time when the
front reaches a given point. We show that it is twice differentiable everywhere
with uniformly bounded second derivative. It is smooth away from the critical
points where the equation is degenerate. We also show that the critical set has
finite codimensional two Hausdorff measure.
For a monotonically advancing front, the arrival time is equivalent to the
level set method; a priori not even differentiable but only satisfies the
equation in the viscosity sense. Using that it is twice differentiable and that
we can identify the Hessian at critical points, we show that it satisfies the
equation in the classical sense.
The arrival time has a game theoretic interpretation. For the linear heat
equation, there is a game theoretic interpretation that relates to
Black-Scholes option pricing.
From variations of the Sard and Lojasiewicz theorems, we relate
differentiability to whether or not singularities all occur at only finitely
many times for flows
Weak measurement of arrival time
The arrival time probability distribution is defined by analogy with the
classical mechanics. The difficulty of requirement to have the values of
non-commuting operators is circumvented using the concept of weak measurements.
The proposed procedure is suitable to the free particles and to the particles
subjected to an external potential, as well. It is shown that such an approach
imposes an inherent limitation to the accuracy of the arrival time
determination.Comment: 3 figure
Time-of-arrival in quantum mechanics
We study the problem of computing the probability for the time-of-arrival of
a quantum particle at a given spatial position. We consider a solution to this
problem based on the spectral decomposition of the particle's (Heisenberg)
state into the eigenstates of a suitable operator, which we denote as the
``time-of-arrival'' operator. We discuss the general properties of this
operator. We construct the operator explicitly in the simple case of a free
nonrelativistic particle, and compare the probabilities it yields with the ones
estimated indirectly in terms of the flux of the Schr\"odinger current. We
derive a well defined uncertainty relation between time-of-arrival and energy;
this result shows that the well known arguments against the existence of such a
relation can be circumvented. Finally, we define a ``time-representation'' of
the quantum mechanics of a free particle, in which the time-of-arrival is
diagonal. Our results suggest that, contrary to what is commonly assumed,
quantum mechanics exhibits a hidden equivalence between independent (time) and
dependent (position) variables, analogous to the one revealed by the
parametrized formalism in classical mechanics.Comment: Latex/Revtex, 20 pages. 2 figs included using epsf. Submitted to
Phys. Rev.
Time of Arrival from Bohmian Flow
We develop a new conception for the quantum mechanical arrival time
distribution from the perspective of Bohmian mechanics. A detection probability
for detectors sensitive to quite arbitrary spacetime domains is formulated.
Basic positivity and monotonicity properties are established. We show that our
detection probability improves and generalises earlier proposals by Leavens and
McKinnon. The difference between the two notions is illustrated through
application to a free wave packet.Comment: 18 pages, 8 figures, to appear in Journ. Phys. A; representation of
ref. 5 improved (thanks to Rick Leavens
Space-time properties of free motion time-of-arrival eigenstates
The properties of the time-of-arrival operator for free motion introduced by
Aharonov and Bohm and of its self-adjoint variants are studied. The domains of
applicability of the different approaches are clarified. It is shown that the
arrival time of the eigenstates is not sharply defined. However, strongly
peaked real-space (normalized) wave packets constructed with narrow Gaussian
envelopes centred on one of the eigenstates provide an arbitrarily sharp
arrival time.Comment: REVTEX, 12 pages, 4 postscript figure
Time-of-arrival lightning activity location system
System fixes location of charge buildup in clouds. It provides range, azimuth, and elevation in real-time so that warning of charge buildup can be implemented
- …