538 research outputs found
Photon mass and quantum effects of the Aharonov-Bohm type
The magnetic field due to the photon rest mass modifies the standard
results of the Aharonov-Bohm effect for electrons, and of other recent quantum
effects. For the effect involving a coherent superposition of beams of
particles with opposite electromagnetic properties, by means of a table-top
experiment, the limit is achievable, improving by 6 orders
of magnitude that derived by Boulware and Deser for the Aharonov-Bohm effect.Comment: 5 page
Causal loop quantum cosmology in momentum space
We shall show that it is possible to make a causal interpretation of loop
quantum cosmology using the momentum as the dynamical variable. We shall show
that one can derive Bohmian trajectories. For a sample cosmological solution
with cosmological constant, the trajectory is plotted.Comment: 21 pages, 2 figures. To appear in Int. J. Mod. Phys. D, 200
Madelung Fluid Model for The Most Likely Wave Function of a Single Free Particle in Two Dimensional Space with a Given Average Energy
We consider spatially two dimensional Madelung fluid whose irrotational
motion reduces into the Schr\"odinger equation for a single free particle. In
this respect, we regard the former as a direct generalization of the latter,
allowing a rotational quantum flow. We then ask for the most likely wave
function possessing a given average energy by maximizing the Shannon
information entropy over the quantum probability density. We show that there
exists a class of solutions in which the wave function is self-trapped,
rotationally symmetric, spatially localized with finite support, and spinning
around its center, yet stationary. The stationarity comes from the balance
between the attractive quantum force field of a trapping quantum potential
generated by quantum probability density and the repulsive centrifugal force of
a rotating velocity vector field. We further show that there is a limiting case
where the wave function is non-spinning and yet still stationary. This special
state turns out to be the lowest stationary state of the ordinary Schr\"odinger
equation for a particle in a cylindrical tube classical potential.Comment: 19 page
Conformal Invariance and Wave-Particle Duality
We present a conformally invariant generalized form of the free particle
action by connecting the wave and particle aspects through gravity. Conformal
invariance breaking is introduced by choosing a particular configurat$ of
dynamical variables. This leads to the geometrization of the quantum aspects of
matter.Comment: 5 page
Misleading signposts along the de Broglie-Bohm road to quantum mechanics
Eighty years after de Broglie's, and a little more than half a century after
Bohm's seminal papers, the de Broglie--Bohm theory (a.k.a. Bohmian mechanics),
which is presumably the simplest theory which explains the orthodox quantum
mechanics formalism, has reached an exemplary state of conceptual clarity and
mathematical integrity. No other theory of quantum mechanics comes even close.
Yet anyone curious enough to walk this road to quantum mechanics is soon being
confused by many misleading signposts that have been put up, and not just by
its detractors, but unfortunately enough also by some of its proponents.
This paper outlines a road map to help navigate ones way.Comment: Dedicated to Jeffrey Bub on occasion of his 65th birthday. Accepted
for publication in Foundations of Physics. A "slip of pen" in the
bibliography has been corrected -- thanks go to Oliver Passon for catching
it
Time-like flows of energy-momentum and particle trajectories for the Klein-Gordon equation
The Klein-Gordon equation is interpreted in the de Broglie-Bohm manner as a
single-particle relativistic quantum mechanical equation that defines unique
time-like particle trajectories. The particle trajectories are determined by
the conserved flow of the intrinsic energy density which can be derived from
the specification of the Klein-Gordon energy-momentum tensor in an
Einstein-Riemann space. The approach is illustrated by application to the
simple single-particle phenomena associated with square potentials.Comment: 14 pages, 11 figure
A dynamical time operator in Dirac's relativistic quantum mechanics
A self-adjoint dynamical time operator is introduced in Dirac's relativistic
formulation of quantum mechanics and shown to satisfy a commutation relation
with the Hamiltonian analogous to that of the position and momentum operators.
The ensuing time-energy uncertainty relation involves the uncertainty in the
instant of time when the wave packet passes a particular spatial position and
the energy uncertainty associated with the wave packet at the same time, as
envisaged originally by Bohr. The instantaneous rate of change of the position
expectation value with respect to the simultaneous expectation value of the
dynamical time operator is shown to be the phase velocity, in agreement with de
Broglie's hypothesis of a particle associated wave whose phase velocity is
larger than c. Thus, these two elements of the original basis and
interpretation of quantum mechanics are integrated into its formal mathematical
structure. Pauli's objection is shown to be resolved or circumvented. Possible
relevance to current developments in interference in time, in Zitterbewegung
like effects in spintronics, grapheme and superconducting systems and in
cosmology is noted
Might EPR particles communicate through a wormhole?
We consider the two-particle wave function of an Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen
system, given by a two dimensional relativistic scalar field model. The Bohm-de
Broglie interpretation is applied and the quantum potential is viewed as
modifying the Minkowski geometry. In this way an effective metric, which is
analogous to a black hole metric in some limited region, is obtained in one
case and a particular metric with singularities appears in the other case,
opening the possibility, following Holland, of interpreting the EPR
correlations as being originated by an effective wormhole geometry, through
which the physical signals can propagate.Comment: Corrected version, to appears in EP
On the influence of resonance photon scattering on atom interference
Here, the influence of resonance photon-atom scattering on the atom
interference pattern at the exit of a three-grating Mach-Zehnder interferometer
is studied. It is assumed that the scattering process does not destroy the
atomic wave function describing the state of the atom before the scattering
process takes place, but only induces a certain shift and change of its phase.
We find that the visibility of the interference strongly depends on the
statistical distribution of transferred momenta to the atom during the
photon-atom scattering event. This also explains the experimentally observed
(Chapman et al 1995 Phys. Rev. Lett. 75 2783) dependence of the visibility on
the ratio d_p/\lambda_i = y'_{12} (2\pi/kd\lambda_i), where y'_{12} is distance
between the place where the scattering event occurs and the first grating, k is
the wave number of the atomic center-of-mass motion, is the grating
constant and \lambda_i is the photon wavelength. Furthermore, it is remarkable
that photon-atom scattering events happen experimentally within the Fresnel
region, i.e. the near field region, associated with the first grating, which
should be taken into account when drawing conclusions about the relevance of
"which-way" information for the interference visibility.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figur
Stability properties of |Psi|^2 in Bohmian dynamics
According to Bohmian dynamics, the particles of a quantum system move along
trajectories, following a velocity field determined by the wave-function
Psi(x,t). We show that for simple one-dimensional systems any initial
probability distribution of a statistical ensemble approaches asymptotically
|Psi(x,t)}|^2 if the system is subject to a random noise of arbitrarily small
intensity.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures; accepted for publication in Phys. Lett.
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