| Literature DB >> 35756876 |
Jonte R Hance1, Sabine Hossenfelder2.
Abstract
In quantum mechanics, the wave function predicts probabilities of possible measurement outcomes, but not which individual outcome is realized in each run of an experiment. This suggests that it describes an ensemble of states with different values of a hidden variable. Here, we analyse this idea with reference to currently known theorems and experiments. We argue that the ψ-ontic/epistemic distinction fails to properly identify ensemble interpretations and propose a more useful definition. We then show that all local ψ-ensemble interpretations which reproduce quantum mechanics violate statistical independence. Theories with this property are commonly referred to as superdeterministic or retrocausal. Finally, we explain how this interpretation helps make sense of some otherwise puzzling phenomena in quantum mechanics, such as the delayed choice experiment, the Elitzur-Vaidman bomb detector and the extended Wigner's friends scenario.Entities:
Keywords: Bell’s Theorem; ensembles; quantum foundations; statistical independence; wave function
Year: 2022 PMID: 35756876 PMCID: PMC9215214 DOI: 10.1098/rspa.2021.0705
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Math Phys Eng Sci ISSN: 1364-5021 Impact factor: 3.213
Figure 1Harrigan and Spekkens’s ψ-epistemic and ψ-ontic models of reality [5]. Wave functions ψ and each have probability distributions over state-space. In a ψ-epistemic model, these can overlap over a subspace. A state within this overlap can then be represented both by ψ and . However, in ψ-ontic models, each state can be represented by at most one wave function. The amount of overlap is quantified by the parameter . For ψ-ontic models, .
Figure 2Sketch to illustrate the relation between the hidden variables which define the state, and the hidden variables λ which define the entire trajectory. and depict two different detector eigenstates. The trajectories that go to the eigenstate belong to cluster , and those which go to belong to cluster , respectively.
Figure 3A diagram showing the two backwards light cones from detectors D1 and D2, and their overlap at point of preparation P.