126 research outputs found
Diagnosing the Trouble With Quantum Mechanics
We discuss an article by Steven Weinberg expressing his discontent with the
usual ways to understand quantum mechanics. We examine the two solutions that
he considers and criticizes and propose another one, which he does not discuss,
the pilot wave theory or Bohmian mechanics, for which his criticisms do not
apply.Comment: 23 pages, 4 figure
Approach to equilibrium for the phonon Boltzmann equation
We study the asymptotics of solutions of the Boltzmann equation describing
the kinetic limit of a lattice of classical interacting anharmonic oscillators.
We prove that, if the initial condition is a small perturbation of an
equilibrium state, and vanishes at infinity, the dynamics tends diffusively to
equilibrium. The solution is the sum of a local equilibrium state, associated
to conserved quantities that diffuse to zero, and fast variables that are
slaved to the slow ones. This slaving implies the Fourier law, which relates
the induced currents to the gradients of the conserved quantities.Comment: 23 page
Schr\"odinger's paradox and proofs of nonlocality using only perfect correlations
We discuss proofs of nonlocality based on a generalization by Erwin
Schr\"odinger of the argument of Einstein, Podolsky and Rosen. These proofs do
not appeal in any way to Bell's inequalities. Indeed, one striking feature of
the proofs is that they can be used to establish nonlocality solely on the
basis of suitably robust perfect correlations. First we explain that
Schr\"odinger's argument shows that locality and the perfect correlations
between measurements of observables on spatially separated systems implies the
existence of a non-contextual value-map for quantum observables; non-contextual
means that the observable has a particular value before its measurement, for
any given quantum system, and that any experiment "measuring this observable"
will reveal that value. Then, we establish the impossibility of a
non-contextual value-map for quantum observables {\it without invoking any
further quantum predictions}. Combining this with Schr\"odinger's argument
implies nonlocality. Finally, we illustrate how Bohmian mechanics is compatible
with the impossibility of a non-contextual value-map.Comment: 30 pages, 2 figure
Renormalization Group and the Melnikov Problem for PDE's
We give a new proof of persistence of quasi-periodic, low dimensional
elliptic tori in infinite dimensional systems. The proof is based on a
renormalization group iteration that was developed recently in [BGK] to address
the standard KAM problem, namely, persistence of invariant tori of maximal
dimension in finite dimensional, near integrable systems. Our result covers
situations in which the so called normal frequencies are multiple. In
particular, it provides a new proof of the existence of small-amplitude,
quasi-periodic solutions of nonlinear wave equations with periodic boundary
conditions.Comment: 44 pages, plain Te
Diffusion in Energy Conserving Coupled Maps
We consider a dynamical system consisting of subsystems indexed by a lattice.
Each subsystem has one conserved degree of freedom ("energy") the rest being
uniformly hyperbolic. The subsystems are weakly coupled together so that the
sum of the subsystem energies remains conserved. We prove that the subsystem
energies satisfy the diffusion equation in a suitable scaling limit
Fourier's Law from Closure Equations
We give a rigorous derivation of Fourier's law from a system of closure
equations for a nonequilibrium stationary state of a Hamiltonian system of
coupled oscillators subjected to heat baths on the boundary. The local heat
flux is proportional to the temperature gradient with a temperature dependent
heat conductivity and the stationary temperature exhibits a nonlinear profile
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