Prologue:
People
read Quantum Mechanics (QM) and all kind of fancy ideas pop up. Multiverse,
Multiple realities (Schrodinger's Cat is Dead and Alive?), Duality of nature, metaphysical
and philosophical undercurrents to our understanding of reality and the
Universe and a general mysticism affiliated to Modern physics- Does God really
play dice with us?
And the truth of the matter is, Quantum
Physics(QP) is just as mystic to general public as it is to physicists.
Multiple explanations are present to explain experimental observations and
phenomenon leading to multiple Quantum Mechanical (QMal) Interpretations. None
of them absolute and supreme. Everyone of them probable and possible.
There are as far as 20 modern QMal Interpretations in circulation. A few fiercely
debated. Others being sidelined as a mere foot-note. Some of the few mainstream
interpretations (and a few favoured by me) are given as follows.
1.
The
Copenhagen Interpretation
aka Shut up and Calculate Interpretation
2.
Hidden
Variables Interpretation
aka Determinism is fundamental Interpretation
3.
Many
Worlds Interpretation
aka The Pop Culture Interpretation
4.
Van-Neumann-Wigner
Interpretation
aka Consciousness causes Collapse Interpretation
5.
De
Broglie- Bohm Interpretation
aka Pilot Wave Theory
6.
Quantum
Darwinism
aka Quantum Natural Selection Theory
There are 13 other major QMal Interpretations.
Several other subdivisions to these interpretations exist as well. Many of
these Interpretations have been disproven as well, in subsequent experiments
and many interpretations have evolved and have been modified to adjust their
predictions with the experimental outputs.
The explanations to most of these, if not all,
interpretations will be given at the end of our journey. A forewarning has to
be issued that although The Copenhagen Interpretation has been followed by
almost all the scientific schools and Many Worlds Interpretation has been
popularized amongst the masses by the mainstream media and pop culture
references, none of these, along with the rest of the interpretations of QM,
have any experimental backing to prove their authenticity. The main reason behind this is one of physics and metaphysics burning question- The Measurement Problem.
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| Courtesy: Dominic Walliman- Various Interpretations of QM |
The Path of Light
In order to understand QM, one must first ask the
question “What was the need to create a system of mechanics so complex and
unintuitive?” Every new breakthrough in science has always been credited to a
phenomenon that remained unanswered. Something inexplicable and unexplainable
has almost always been the cause of a new discovery. Similar was the case in
QM.
The
Corpuscular Theory of Light:
In order to answer the question asked above, one must travel back almost 300
years before the actual conception of QMal postulates to 1637 CE and Rene
Descartes has just given his version of corpuscular theory of light. 35 years
later Sir Isaac Newton pioneered this point of view and elaborated on it in
1672, officially formulating a “Corpuscular” or “Particle” Theory of light. He stated in
his Hypothesis of Light in 1675 that light was composed
of corpuscles (particles
of matter) which were emitted in all directions from a source. This
was one of the early front runners in explaining the nature of light and
successfully explained optical phenomena like reflection, polarization
(qualitatively), and even refraction, although incorrectly.
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The Wave Nature of Light:
Around the same time as Rene Descartes and Sir
Isaac Newton, Robert Hooke and Christian Huygens were exploring the same
question, but via a different route. Robert Hooke, in his quest to explain the
existence of colours, developed a “pulse theory” which compared emission of
light from a point source like spreading of water waves from a splash in water
(Micrographia-“Observation IX”, 1665). 7 years later, Hooke proposed that
light’s vibration could be perpendicular to the direction of propagation of
light.
In 1678, Christian Huygens worked out a mathematical framework explaining the
wave nature of light and published it in his Treatise on light in
1690. He proposed that light was emitted in all directions as a series of waves
in a medium called the Luminiferous ether.
Wave theory heavily derived it’s predictions from
the behavior of water waves in water and sound waves in air. Just like sound
and water waves, light waves were supposed to interfere with each other and
form an interference pattern, as well as necessarily required a medium to
travel (which Huygen termed as ever-permeating, Luminiferous Ether)
The main criticism of Wave Theory of Light by Newton (who was a contemporary
scientist of Huygen) was the rectilinear propagation of light (light travels in
a straight line). Waves were known to bend around obstacles (as observed in the
case of sound waves), while light travelled strictly in a straight line, just
like a particle would. However, the phenomena of diffraction of light had been
observed by Francesco Grimaldi, and Newton had to concede that a light particle could create a localised
wave in the aether, in order to explain the phenomenon
of diffraction.
Newton's theory was predominant for more than 100 years and took precedence
over Huygens' wave theory
of light, partly because of Newton's great prestige,
and partly because the phenomena exhibited by light at that time were mostly
explained by the corpuscular theory of light*. However,
since Newton was able to explain most of the optical phenomena and also held a
lot of prestige in the scientific community, his corpuscular theory became
widely accepted in the scientific world. In 1704, Newton published the final
version of his theory in the now famous book, Optika.
Newton’s reputation led to Corpuscular Theory holding much sway during the 18th
century until 1801, when Thomas Young demonstrated the now famous, Double-Slit
Experiment(this is not the last time we will be reading about this experiment)
on light to produce an interference pattern. The exhibition of Interference by
light was a big blow to Newton’s Corpuscular theory and a major victory for
Huygen’s Wave Nature of light. His wave mechanics were accurately able to
explain and predict phenomena like interference, and refraction, correctly, while
Leonard Euler in 1746, has already argued in Nova theoria lucis et colorum
that wave theory of light is a better explanation for the phenomenon of
diffraction of light.
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| Interference pattern observed by Thomas Young in his Double Slit Experiment. |
The final nail in the coffin to Newton’s
Corpuscular theory of light came in 1850 when Leon Foucalt’s experimentally
found out the speed of light fairly accurately to make comments on the two
competing theories of light. Newton's corpuscular theory implied that light
would travel faster in a denser medium, while the wave theory of Huygens and
others implied the opposite. Foucalt’s results supported the Wave theory of
light and hence, in 1850, Newton’s corpuscular theory was finally discarded.
One of the salient features in the Wave theory of
light was that it required light, just like other waves, a medium of
transmission to propagate from one point to another. In the next section, we
will see how this particular point led to the evolution of light as a simple
wave to an “Electromagnetic” radiation.
The Electromagnetic
Theory:
Just as developments in the study of optics were
being carried out leading to eventual discarding of the Newtonian Corpuscular
Theory of Light, a general consensus has developed around the mid 19th
century that light was indeed a wave. But what kind of a wave?
As discussed earlier that the traditional scientific definition of a wave
necessarily required a medium of transmission. However, light travels from Sun
to Earth without the presence of any medium in between. In order to solve this
conundrum, Huygen had introduced an invisible, omnipresent medium known as
Luminiferous Ether and this kind of stop-gap solution was generally accepted,
although with a lot of doubt.
However, this was not the only theory doing rounds in the scientific circles of
mid 19th century. A certain Michael Faraday, in 1845, demonstrated a
phenomenon which is now known as the Faraday Rotation. This phenomenon was a
direct experimental evidence given by Faraday which established a dependence
between magnetic field lines and light, hinting an underlying relationship
between magnetism (and by Faraday’s own laws of electromagnetic induction,
electricity too) and light. While in 1846, Faraday just speculated about light
being a disturbance in the magnetic field lines, by 1847, he had proposed that
light is in-fact a high-frequency electromagnetic vibration, which could
propagate even in the absence of a medium such as the ether. However Michael
Faraday had no formal education and had no background of mathematics and hence
could not give a mathematical framework to back his proposal.
It is here that a certain James Clerk Maxwell enters into the frame and through
his ingenious mathematical mind, came up with a set of 4 differential
equations, now known as the famous Maxwell’s equations, which laid the
foundation of Electrical Engineering and ushered the world into the era of
modern science.
Faraday's work in electromagnetic induction and electromagnetism
inspired James
Clerk Maxwell to study electromagnetic
radiation and light. Around 1862, while lecturing at King's College, Maxwell
calculated that the speed of propagation of an electromagnetic field is
approximately that of the speed of light. He considered this to be more than
just a coincidence, commenting,
"We can scarcely avoid the conclusion that light consists in the transverse undulations of the same medium which is the cause of electric and magnetic phenomena.”
By 1873, Maxwell in his seminal work, A Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism, had given a complete mathematical description of the behavior of electric and magnetic fields. Using the 4 differential equations (Maxwell’s equations), Maxwell proved that light is propagated as an oscillating electric and magnetic field and hence concluded that light was therefore a form of electromagnetic radiation. Soon after, Heinrich Hertz confirmed Maxwell's theory experimentally by generating and detecting radio waves in the laboratory, and demonstrating that these waves behaved exactly like visible light. Light was still considered to be a wave, just one that doesn’t necessarily needs a medium to propagate.
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That's for the next segment.





Special kudos for creating blog !!!! Finally my basics and TBBT knowledge is being utilised , waiting for next .
ReplyDeleteThanks! :)
DeleteVery informative. Thank you, sir, this will be extremely helpful to me.
ReplyDeleteThanks Ankita. Means a lot coming from you! :D
DeleteProbability is 0 to 1.
ReplyDeleteSpontaneity is 0 or 1.
Universe works on spontaneity. That's the catch in QM...
The catch is in the details. Spontaneity isn't defined mathematically. The closest you can come to spontaneity is a Dirac-Delta function.
DeleteProbability is a Density Function. When and how does the switch over from 0 TO 1 to 0 OR 1 takes place, is The Measurement Problem. :)
Great effort.
ReplyDeleteThank you! :)
DeleteA humble beginning. Get going. Scale greater heights.
ReplyDeleteThanks a lot! :)
DeleteFollowing this, waiting for the next segment.
ReplyDeleteThanks brother! :)
DeleteA great start ✌🏻
ReplyDeleteThank you Nirmit.I was truly able to memorise the exact principles in NCERT pages and how I have loved physics always.Looking forward for more.
ReplyDeleteSo many ways to explain experimental observations and factors leading to multiple Quantum Mechanical Interpretations. None 100% absolute or unconditional. Everyone of them probable n possible! That's the beauty you've penned so simply! 💯💪👏
ReplyDelete