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The main theme of this book is the idea that quantum mechanics is valid not only for microscopic objects but also for the macroscopic apparatus used for quantum mechanical measurements. The author demonstrates the intimate relations that exist between quantum mechanics and its interpretation which are induced by the quantum mechanical measurement process. Consequently, the book is concerned both with the philosophical, metatheoretical problems of interpretations and with the more formal problems of quantum object theory. The consequences of this approach turn out to be partly very promising and partly rather disappointing. On the one hand, it is possible to give a rigorous justification of some important parts of interpretation, such as probability, by means of object theory. On the other hand, the problem of the objectification of measurement results leads to inconsistencies which cannot be resolved in an obvious way. This open problem has far-reaching consequences for the possibility of recognising an objective reality in physics.
Technological advances have made it possible to perform experiments, once considered to be purely gedanken, which test the counterintuitive and bizarre consequences of quantum theory. This book provides simple accounts of these experiments and an understanding of what they aim to prove and why this is important. After introducing the main theoretical concepts and problems with the foundations of quantum mechanics, early chapters discuss experiments in the areas of wave-particle duality, cavity quantum electrodynamics and quantum non-demolition measurement. The text then examines investigation of certain predictions including the Aharanov-Bohm effect, before tackling the problem of macroscopic quantum coherence. Later chapters consider methods of testing the quantum Zeno paradox, collapse, macroscopic quantum jumps, tunnelling times and Einstein-Bell non-locality. Introductions to the theory behind types of measuring devices such as micromasers and those based on the concept of quantum non-demolition are also given. Detailed references are included.
This graduate/research level text describes in a unified fashion the statistical mechanics of random walks, random surfaces and random higher dimensional manifolds with an emphasis on the geometrical aspects of the theory and applications to the quantisation of strings, gravity and topological field theory. With chapters on random walks, random surfaces, two- and higher dimensional quantum gravity, topological quantum field theories and Monte Carlo simulations of random geometries, the text provides a self-contained account of quantum geometry from a statistical field theory point of view. The approach uses discrete approximations and develops analytical and numerical tools. Continuum physics is recovered through scaling limits at phase transition points and the relation to conformal quantum field theories coupled to quantum gravity is described. The most important numerical work is covered, but the main aim is to develop mathematically precise results that have wide applications. Many diagrams and references are included.
The spectacular structures of today, such as large suspension bridges, are the result of scientific principles established during the new iron age of the nineteenth century. The book is concerned with a detailed and critical account of the development and application of those principles (including statics and elasticity) by people of remarkable talent in applied mathematics and engineering. They were, of course, mainly motivated by the demands of the railway, construction boom. Among the outstanding examples chosen by the author is Robert Stephenson's use of novel principles for the design and erection of the Britannia tubular iron bridge over the Menai Straits. A History of the Theory of Structures in the Nineteenth Century is a uniquely comprehensive account of a century of the development of the theory; an account which skilfully blends the personalities and the great works and which is enlivened by little-known accounts of friendship and controversy.
This text describes novel treatments of quantum problems using enhanced quantization procedures. When treated conventionally, certain systems yield trivial and unacceptable results. This book describes enhanced procedures, generally involving extended correspondence rules for the association of a classical and a quantum theory, which, when applied to such systems, yield nontrivial and acceptable results. The text begins with a review of classical mechanics, Hilbert space, quantum mechanics, and scalar quantum field theory. Next, analytical skills are further developed, a special class of models is studied, and a discussion of continuous and discontinuous perturbations is presented. Later chapters cover two further classes of models both of which entail discontinuous perturbations. The final chapter offers a brief summary, concluding with a conjecture regarding interacting covariant scalar quantum field theories. Symmetry is repeatedly used as a tool to help develop solutions for simple and complex problems alike. Challenging exercises and detailed references are included.
Quantum physics is believed to be the fundamental theory underlying our understanding of the physical universe. However, it is based on concepts and principles that have always been difficult to understand and controversial in their interpretation. This book aims to explain these issues using a minimum of technical language and mathematics. After a brief introduction to the ideas of quantum physics, the problems of interpretation are identified and explained. The rest of the book surveys, describes and criticises a range of suggestions that have been made with the aim of resolving these problems; these include the traditional, or 'Copenhagen' interpretation, the possible role of the conscious mind in measurement, and the postulate of parallel universes. This new edition has been revised throughout to take into account developments in this field over the past fifteen years, including the idea of 'consistent histories' to which a completely new chapter is devoted.
In this chapter, we present some fundamental issues about approximation methods that are often used when a quantum-mechanical system is perturbed and about the relationship between classical and quantum mechanics. In Sec. 10.1 we introduce the stationary perturbation theory, while Sec. 10.2 is devoted to time-dependent perturbations. In Sec. 10.3 we briefly examine the adiabatic theorem. In Sec. 10.4 we introduce the variation method, an approximation method that is not based on perturbation theory. In Sec. 10.5 we discuss the classical limit of the quantum-mechanical equations, whereas in Sec. 10.6 we deal with the semiclassical approximation, in particular the WKB method. On the basis of the previous approximation methods in Sec. 10.7 we present scattering theory. Finally, in Sec. 10.8 we treat a method that has a wide range of applications: the path-integral method.
Stationary perturbation theory
Perturbation theory is a rather general approximation method that may be applied when a small additional force (the perturbation) acts on a system (the unperturbed system), whose quantum dynamics is fully known. If the disturbance is small, it modifies both the energy levels and the stationary states. This allows us to make an expansion in power series of a perturbation parameter, which is assumed to be small. Perturbation theory may be applied both to the case where the additional force is time-independent (in which case a stationary treatment suffices – the subject of the present section) as well as to the case where it explicitly depends on time.
In this chapter we shall discuss some elementary examples of quantum dynamics. In Sec. 4.1 we shall go back to the problem of a particle in a box, this time with finite potential wells. In Sec. 4.2 we shall analyze the effects of a potential barrier on a moving particle. In Sec. 4.3 we shall consider another quantum effect which has no analogue in the classical domain: a quantum particle can tunnel in a classically forbidden region. In Sec. 4.4 perhaps the most important dynamical typology (with a wide range of applications) is considered: the harmonic oscillator. Finally, in Sec. 4.5 several types of elementary fields are considered.
Finite potential wells
In Sec. 3.4 we have considered what is perhaps the simplest example of quantum dynamics, that is a free particle moving in a box with infinite potential walls. Consider the motion of, say, a one-dimensional particle in a rectangular potential well with finite steps. In Fig. 4.1 we show two of such potentials, symmetric in (a) and asymmetric in (b).
Let us consider the case pictured in Fig. 4.1(a) and indicate with V0 the energy of the potential well. We may therefore distinguish three regions on the x-axis: region I (x < 0), where the potential energy is equal to V0; region II (0 ≤ x ≤ a), where the particle is free; and region III (x > a), where the potential energy is again equal to V0.
In this chapter we shall deal with the most recent and challenging development of quantum theory, and also one of the most important ones for interpretational, foundational, and even technological issues. This field finds its roots in the observation that quantum states can be viewed as bricks of information in a way that is intrinsically different from classical information. As a consequence, the ability to manipulate quantum states translates immediately into a new form of information processing and exchange. What has been discovered during this conceptual passage is that this type of information processing is in many respects much richer than its classical analogue. This has contributed to the understanding of quantum states as an extension of the classical concept of state and not as a defective reality (see also Subsec. 2.3.4 and Sec. 15.5). The impossibility of knowing the value of all observables at the same time that had been seen as a strong limitation in the early days of quantum mechanics, now turns out to be a manifestation of a different – but not necessarily poorer – resource. On the contrary, we have increasingly discovered that superposition and entanglement are additional informational resources. These resources, for instance, allow for certain particular computations that are much faster on a quantum device than on its classical counterpart, and therefore the former is able to solve problems that cannot be practically solved using classical means.
In this chapter we shall deal with the quantum dynamics of an open system. By open quantum system we mean here a system which interacts with an environment (see Sec. 9.4): since we are not interested in the dynamics of the environment, we shall have to describe the evolution of the system in some “effective” way. In particular, if we consider only the evolution of the system, it will be non-unitary, and this will represent the subject of this chapter. As we know, Hamiltonian quantum dynamics is unitary and changes pure states into pure states. On the other hand, non-unitary dynamics changes an initially pure state into a mixture, which must be described by a density matrix (see Ch. 5). In the case of macroscopic systems, the coupling with the environment may be arbitrarily reduced and therefore its influence can be made correspondingly small (see Sec. 1.1). Microscopic systems, however, always couple to the environment and this coupling cannot be considered negligible. This is the reason why the quantum theory of open systems is one of the most important and fundamental chapters of quantum mechanics that, though born in quantum optics, has many implications in almost all fields of physics. The present chapter can be seen as a further development of the measurement theory (see Ch. 9), as open systems manifest a decoherent dynamics (see in particular Sec. 9.4).
In most textbooks, measurement does not receive the full attention it deserves and sometimes is even not treated at all, apart a brief and cryptic mention of the “reduction of the wave packet.” However, in the last decades, the situation has profoundly changed and it is time to consider measurement a fundamental part of quantum mechanics, even, to a certain extent, an important generalization of the traditional theory (see also Chs. 14–15).
This chapter consists of three major parts. In the first block (Secs. 9.1–9.4) we develop the main physical features of the measurement process: the heart of the argument is here represented by the aspects related to the interpretation. In the second part (Secs. 9.5–9.8) we discuss several special (and partly interdependent) topics of measurement: the heart here is represented by experimental aspects. In the third part (Secs. 9.9–9.12) we deal with the measurement process on a more formal plane, making use, in particular, of the generalization represented by the concepts of effect and positive operator valued measure (POVM).
As we have said, the measurement problem is one of the most fundamental issues in the conceptual structure of quantum mechanics (as described in Sec. 9.1) and has a long history that will be examined in Sec. 9.2. In this context, the existence of apparently paradoxical quantum states comes about: the so-called Schrödinger cat states (see Sec. 9.3).