726 research outputs found
Decoherence: Concepts and Examples
We give a pedagogical introduction to the process of decoherence - the
irreversible emergence of classical properties through interaction with the
environment. After discussing the general concepts, we present the following
examples: Localisation of objects, quantum Zeno effect, classicality of fields
and charges in QED, and decoherence in gravity theory. We finally emphasise the
important interpretational features of decoherence.Comment: 24 pages, LATEX, 9 figures, needs macro lamuphys.sty, to appear in
the Proceedings of the 10th Born Symposiu
Quantum Theory and Time Asymmetry
The relation between quantum measurement and thermodynamically irreversible
processes is investigated. The reduction of the state vector is fundamentally
asymmetric in time and shows an observer-relatedness which may explain the
double interpretation of the state vector as a representation of physical
states as well as of information about them. The concept of relevance being
used in all statistical theories of irreversible thermodynamics is shown to be
based on the same observer-relatedness. Quantum theories of irreversible
processes implicitly use an objectivized process of state vector reduction. The
conditions for the reduction are discussed, and I speculate that the final
(subjective) observer system might even be carried by a spacetime point.Comment: Latex version of a paper published in 1979 (with minor revisions), 18
page
SHEARING IRRADIATED URANIUM PLATES
Natural U plates that were irradiated to 600 and 1500 Mwd/t were cut under water by a guillotine-iype shear. Irradiation reduced the force required for shearing to 50% of that required for unirradiated U. Measurements were made of radioactivity released to treated and untreated water in which the cut sections were stored. (auth
Entanglement and the Thermodynamic Arrow of Time
We discuss quantum entanglement in the context of the thermodynamic arrow of
time. We review the role of correlations in entropy-decreasing events and prove
that the occurrence of a transformation between two thermodynamic states
constitutes a new type of entanglement witness, one not defined as a separating
plane in state space between separable and entangled states, but as a physical
process dependent on the local initial properties of the states. Extending work
by Partovi, we consider a general entangled multipartite system that allows
large reversals of the thermodynamic arrow of time. We describe a hierarchy of
arrows that arises from the different correlations allowed in a quantum state
and examine these features in the context of Maxwell's Demon. We examine in
detail the case of three qubits, and also propose some simple experimental
demonstrations possible with small numbers of qubits.Comment: 10 pages with 9 figure
Following a "Collapsing" Wavefunction
I study the quantum mechanics of a spin interacting with an ``apparatus''.
Although the evolution of the whole system is unitary, the spin evolution is
not. The system is chosen so that the spin exhibits loss of quantum coherence,
or ``wavefunction collapse'', of the sort usually associated with a quantum
measurement. The system is analyzed from the point of view of the spin density
matrix (or ``Schmidt paths''), and also using the consistent histories
approach. These two points of view are contrasted with each other. Connections
between the results and the form of the Hamiltonian are discussed in detail.Comment: 30 pages, plain LaTex, 3 figures in a separate uuencoded fil
On the Definition of Decoherence
We examine the relationship between the decoherence of quantum-mechanical
histories of a closed system (as discussed by Gell-Mann and Hartle) and
environmentally-induced diagonalization of the density operator for an open
system. We study a definition of decoherence which incorporates both of these
ideas, and show that it leads to a consistent probabilistic interpretation of
the reduced density operator.Comment: 10 pages, LaTeX, SJSU/TP-93-1
Locating Overlap Information in Quantum Systems
When discussing the black hole information problem the term ``information
flow'' is frequently used in a rather loose fashion. In this article I attempt
to make this notion more concrete. I consider a Hilbert space which is
constructed as a tensor product of two subspaces (representing for example
inside and outside the black hole). I discuss how the system has the capacity
to contain information which is in NEITHER of the subspaces. I attempt to
quantify the amount of information located in each of the two subspaces, and
elsewhere, and analyze the extent to which unitary evolution can correspond to
``information flow''. I define the notion of ``overlap information'' which
appears to be well suited to the problem.Comment: 25 pages plain LaTeX, no figures. Imperial/TP/93-94/2
Interacting classical and quantum ensembles
A consistent description of interactions between classical and quantum
systems is relevant to quantum measurement theory, and to calculations in
quantum chemistry and quantum gravity. A solution is offered here to this
longstanding problem, based on a universally-applicable formalism for ensembles
on configuration space. This approach overcomes difficulties arising in
previous attempts, and in particular allows for backreaction on the classical
ensemble, conservation of probability and energy, and the correct classical
equations of motion in the limit of no interaction. Applications include
automatic decoherence for quantum ensembles interacting with classical
measurement apparatuses; a generalisation of coherent states to hybrid harmonic
oscillators; and an equation for describing the interaction of quantum matter
fields with classical gravity, that implies the radius of a Robertson-Walker
universe with a quantum massive scalar field can be sharply defined only for
particular `quantized' values.Comment: 31 pages, minor clarifications and one Ref. added, to appear in PR
Decoherence of a Pointer by a Gas Reservoir
We study the effect of the environment on the process of the measurement of a
state of a microscopic spin half system. The measuring apparatus is a heavy
particle, whose center of mass coordinates can be considered at the end of the
measurement as approximately classical, and thus can be used as a pointer. The
state of the pointer, which is the result of its interaction with the spin, is
transformed into a mixed state by the coupling of the pointer to the
environment. The environment is considered to be a gas reservoir, whose
particles interact with the pointer. This results in a Fokker-Planck equation
for the reduced density matrix of the pointer. The solution of the equation
shows that the quantum coherences, which are characteristic to the entangled
state between the probabilities to find the pointer in one of two positions,
decays exponentially fast in time. We calculate the exponential decay function
of this decoherence effect, and express it in terms of the parameters of the
model.Comment: 41 pages, 1 figur
- …