Quantum fluctuations, particles and entanglement: solving the quantum measurement problems
Abstract
The so-called quantum measurement problems are solved from a new perspective. One of the main observations is that the basic entities of our world are particles, elementary or composite. It follows that each elementary process, hence each measurement process at its core, is a spacetime, pointlike, event. Another key idea is that, when a microsystem gets into contact with the experimental device, factorization of rapidly fails and entangled mixed states appear. The wave functions for the microsystem-apparatus coupled system for different measurement outcomes then lack overlapping spacetime support. It means that the aftermath of each measurement is a single term in the sum: a ``wave-function collapse". Our discussion leading to a diagonal density matrix, = diag ( |c1|2, …, |cn|2, … ) shows how the information encoded in the wave function | = Σn cn | n gets transcribed, via entanglement with the experimental device and environment, into the relative frequencies Pn = |cn|2 for various experimental outcomes F=fn. Our discussion represents the first, significant steps towards filling in the logical gaps in the conventional interpretation based on Born's rule, replacing it with a clearer understanding of quantum mechanics. Accepting objective reality of quantum fluctuations, independent of any experiments, and independently of human presence, one renounces the idea that in a fundamental, complete theory of Nature the result of each single experiment must necessarily be predictable.
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