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Collapse of the Wave Function

Collapse of the Wave Function

Collapse of the Wave Function

Models, Ontology, Origin, and Implications
Shan Gao, Shanxi University, China
April 2018
Hardback
9781108428989
£141.00
GBP
Hardback
USD
eBook

    This is the first single volume about the collapse theories of quantum mechanics, which is becoming a very active field of research in both physics and philosophy. In standard quantum mechanics, it is postulated that when the wave function of a quantum system is measured, it no longer follows the Schrödinger equation, but instantaneously and randomly collapses to one of the wave functions that correspond to definite measurement results. However, why and how a definite measurement result appears is unknown. A promising solution to this problem are collapse theories in which the collapse of the wave function is spontaneous and dynamical. Chapters written by distinguished physicists and philosophers of physics discuss the origin and implications of wave-function collapse, the controversies around collapse models and their ontologies, and new arguments for the reality of wave function collapse. This is an invaluable resource for students and researchers interested in the philosophy of physics and foundations of quantum mechanics.

    • Written by leading experts in the field, it covers all the latest research developments
    • As the first single volume about collapse theories it presents all information in one accessible volume
    • Presenting new arguments for the reality of wave function collapse, readers can learn the latest developments of solutions for the measurement problem

    Reviews & endorsements

    'Collapse models are now moving from conferences on philosophy and physics to the experimental arena, and this volume assembled by Shan Gao is a timely collection of essays by leading practitioners which views collapse theories from multiple vantage points. It's valuable reading for theorists, experimenters, and philosophers of physics alike.' Stephen L. Adler, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, New Jersey

    See more reviews

    Product details

    April 2018
    Hardback
    9781108428989
    358 pages
    254 × 180 × 19 mm
    0.86kg
    8 b/w illus.
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • List of contributors
    • Preface
    • Part I. Models:
    • 1. How to teach and think about spontaneous wave function collapse theories: not like before Lajos Diósi
    • 2. What really matters in Hilbert-space stochastic processes Giancarlo Ghirardi, Oreste Nicrosini and Alberto Rimini
    • 3. Dynamical collapse for photons Philip Pearle
    • 4. Quantum state reduction Dorje C. Brody and Lane P. Hughston
    • 5. Collapse models and spacetime symmetries Daniel J. Bedingham
    • Part II. Ontology:
    • 6. Ontology for collapse theories Wayne C. Myrvold
    • 7. Properties and the born rule in GRW Theory Roman Frigg
    • 8. Paradoxes and primitive ontology in collapse theories of quantum mechanics Roderich Tumulka
    • 9. On the status of primitive ontology Peter J. Lewis
    • 10. Collapse or no collapse? What is the best ontology of quantum mechanics in the primitive ontology framework? Michael Esfeld
    • Part III. Origin:
    • 11. Quantum state reduction via gravity, and possible tests using Bose-Einstein condensates Ivette Fuentes and Roger Penrose
    • 12. Collapse. What else? Nicolas Gisin
    • 13. Three arguments for the reality of wave-function collapse Shan Gao
    • Part IV. Implications:
    • 14. Could inelastic interactions induce quantum probabilistic transitions? Nicholas Maxwell
    • 15. How the Schrödinger Equation would predict collapse: an explicit mechanism Roland Omnes
    • 16. Wave function collapse, non-locality, and space-time structure Tejinder P. Singh
    • 17. The weight of collapse: dynamical reduction models in general relativistic contexts Elias Okon and Daniel Sudarsky
    • Index.
      Contributors
    • Lajos Diósi, Giancarlo Ghirardi, Oreste Nicrosini, Alberto Rimini, Philip Pearle, Dorje C. Brody, Lane P. Hughston, Daniel J. Bedingham, Wayne C. Myrvold, Roman Frigg, Roderich Tumulka, Peter J. Lewis, Michael Esfeld, Ivette Fuentes, Roger Penrose, Nicolas Gisin, Shan Gao, Nicholas Maxwell, Roland Omnes, Tejinder P. Singh, Elias Okon, Daniel Sudarsky

    • Editor
    • Shan Gao , Shanxi University, China

      Shan Gao is Professor of Philosophy at the Research Center for Philosophy of Science and Technology at Shanxi University. He is the founder and managing editor of the International Journal of Quantum Foundations, and is the author of several books including the recent monograph The Meaning of the Wave Function: In Search of the Ontology of Quantum Mechanics (Cambridge, 2017). His research focuses on the philosophy of physics and foundations of quantum mechanics. He is also interested in the philosophy of mind and the philosophy of science.