Overlooked wavefunction duality

In summary: What are the "standard" quantum gravity parameters?[lamb]=h/p and [nu]=E/hOriginally posted by Loren Booda String theory, which first conceived T-duality, substitutes for "standard" quantum gravity parameters a correspondent artifice of wave compactification among superstring dimensions.
  • #1
Loren Booda
3,125
4
An interchange between variable action and Planck's constant in
conventional wavefunctions represents a spectrum of virtual states
that invert standard eigennumber solutions. The resultant "inverse
wavefunctions" predict discrete values for virtual actions (in general
those less than or equal to 2h). The inverse (virtual) wavefunction
obeys both the de Broglie and Einstein postulates, and can be
expressed in a linear Schroedinger equation. Conventional (real) and
virtual wavefunctions may interfere to generate the family of
subatomic particles from associated superstring vibration and winding
numbers. The virtual wavefunction endows phase space with information
nested locally (=<2h), yet prerequisite for seeming non-local
correlations. That real and virtual wavefunctions evolve from a
common phase space origin helps to explain this anomaly.

I simply ask you, especially those familiar with quantum field theory,
whether the virtual wavefunction could be a valid concept. More
details describing this overlooked modification to quantum mechanics
can be found in the first article of my website at
http://www.quantumdream.net
 
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  • #2
That real and virtual wavefunctions evolve from a common phase space origin helps to explain this anomaly.

I'm an idiot but in lay terms are you talking about all wavefunctions (particles and their properties) being linked regardless of apparent distance and these wavefunctions interacting in a phase space where, if we are to use an analogue to 3d space, everything is colocated??

Raavin [?]
 
  • #3
For a photon, it has a mirror anti-photon, it has a dual wavefunction, it is always entangled with its mirror particle.

The photon can exchange its momentum with its own anti-photons position, and vica versa, this is what entangled states are.

An ordinary observed(detected) photon is one that has un-tangled in the process of HUP needed to observe it.

The appearence of a Virtual wavefunction cannot manifest locally, in the near vicinity of real photons, it has to have no interference with its corresponding mirror partner, thus the space it occupies is the for the briefest moment, at the farthest location from its coupled counterpart, one could say that when a real photon is detected, its mirror self particle, is at the other end of the wavefunction, with no local interference registered.
 
  • #4
Raavin, take spacetime evolving from the big bang as an analogy. The horizon problem states that for expansion following Hubble's law, the opposite horizons relative to the observer cannot now interchange information, but once could.

Likewise, I postulate mutually entangled phase space events to have arisen from a primordial shared state, and retain weak correlation. Specific real wavefunction actions expand outward from a value h/2 (h being Planck's constant), and corresponding virtual wavefunction actions progress inwardly from 2h. Translated to spacetime, an observation may virtually encompass great distances or particle velocities simultaneously.

The mapping of real action eigenvalues is reciprocally conformal to those virtual. The two, "polar" wavefunctions exhibit spherical symmetry (colocate) around a spherical shell of action h in phase space. They also create particles where there are mixed (real and virtual) states interfering.
 
  • #5
Originally posted by Loren Booda
An interchange between variable action and Planck's constant in
conventional wavefunctions

Was there something specific you came across that inspired you're idea?
 
  • #6
jeff, that "The inverse (virtual) wavefunction obeys both the de Broglie and Einstein postulates, and can be expressed further in a linear Schroedinger equation." Also, the only justifications for a mathematical wavefunction entity are essentially identical for both "real" and "virtual" wavefunctions. For some applications in field theory, I believe, the virtual wavefunction is more efficient than its real counterpart.
 
  • #7
Originally posted by Loren Booda
jeff, that "The inverse (virtual) wavefunction obeys both the de Broglie and Einstein postulates, and can be expressed further in a linear Schroedinger equation." Also, the only justifications for a mathematical wavefunction entity are essentially identical for both "real" and "virtual" wavefunctions. For some applications in field theory, I believe, the virtual wavefunction is more efficient than its real counterpart.

What are the de Broglie and Einstein postulates?
 
  • #8
[lamb]=h/p and [nu]=E/h
 
  • #9
Originally posted by Loren Booda
[lamb]=h/p and [nu]=E/h

The second relation has always been attributed to Planck since he was the first to write it down.

posted by Loren Booda on Loren Booda's website
T-duality, an essential symmetry of superstrings, relates to us comparable complementarity appreciated through the aesthetics of mathematics.

...physics that utilize a T-duality analog, "phase-duality," to modify first the quantum wavefunction, and secondly general relativity's metric tensor. P-duality generalizes current physical models...this P-duality complementarity principle...

String theory, which first conceived T-duality, substitutes for "standard" quantum gravity parameters a correspondent artifice of wave compactification among superstring dimensions.

...the T-duality analog, P-duality, can double the dimensionality available to the quantum wavefunction by considering an entangling mirror symmetry between phase space and its dynamic inverse. This inversion enables many quantum interpretations, especially a novel perspective on quantum field theory, and explores semiclassical aspects of modern physics. Similarly, P-duality modifies Einstein's spacetime metric tensor by means of a quantized "action-equivalent radius of curvature."

inverse phase space, contains all virtual states described by "virtual wavefunctions." Such wavefunctions differ from their conventional counterparts by the interchange of their variable actions S_ with h (Planck's constant). I. e., j[S, h] --> j-[h, S].

To avoid confusion and arguments about semantics, would you mind laying out in detailed mathematical terms the precise correspondence between T-duality and "P-duality"?
 
  • #10
For Planck, [nu]=E/h was more a mathematical fix, whereas Einstein applied it specifically to the physical particle nature of the quantum, directly measurable.

My P-duality, or phase duality, compares the solutions of wavefunctions with standard and inverted phase arguments. By phase arguments I mean those ratios therein between variable action (rp, say) and constant action (Planck's constant h, say), or vice versa. Again, examples are given beginning the first article of my website http://www.quantumdream.net.

These phase arguments, for the wavefunctions given, generate eigenvalues to an arbitrarily zero-valued eigenvalue equation 0=Im(exp(2[pi](rp/h))) or 0=Im(exp(2[pi](h/rp))). The solutions, in units of h, for the former conventional "real" wavefunction are the N/2, and for the latter inverse "virtual" wavefunction the 2/N-, where N and N- are nonzero integers.

Vibration and winding numbers of T-duality are given by analogous N and N-. Combining these components (see the chart in Brian Greene's popular book on superstrings, or page 29 of April 1996 Physics Today) is achieved equivalently by solving interfered P-dualistic wavefunctions.
 
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  • #11
Loren,

Working in (1+1)-dimensional spacetime, apply p-duality to the three simplest of quantum mechanical systems: the free particle, the particle in a box, and the harmonic oscillator. Write down all observables along with their commutation relations and in particular their hamiltonians and associated spectra.

Also, discuss how classical physics is recovered from these quantum mechanical p-dual systems.
 
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  • #12
Loren Booda


Free Particle with potential: conventional-real <==> inverse-virtual (')


Wavefunctions (Y):

Y=A(exp(2[pi]ixpx/h)) <==> Y'=A'(exp(2[pi]ih/x'(px')'))


Operators (*):

(px)*=-i(h/2[pi])(d/dx) <==> (1/(px')')*=(-i/2[pi]h)(d/d(1/x'))

(x*)K(x-`x)=(`x)K(x-`x) <==> ((1/x')*)K(1/x'-1/`x')=(1/`x')K(1/x'-1/`x') where K is the Kronecker delta function


Commutators:

[x*,p*]=ih/2[pi] <==> [(1/x')*,(1/(px')')*]=i/2[pi]h


Hamiltonians:

H*=(p*)2/2m+V(x)=-(h/2[pi])2/2m+V(x) <==> [See the 1+1 dimensional (time dependent) virtual Schroedinger's equation on page 4 of my website]

Spectra:

E=nh[nu] <==> E'=h[nu]'/n'

1/n <==> n'

[nu]=1/[tau] <==> [nu]'=1/[tau]'
 
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  • #13
Originally posted by Loren Booda
Loren Booda


Free Particle with potential: conventional-real <==> inverse-virtual (')


Wavefunctions (Y):

Y=A(exp(2[pi]ixpx/h)) <==> Y'=A'(exp(2[pi]ih/x'(px')'))


Operators (*):

(px)*=-i(h/2[pi])(d/dx) <==> (1/(px')')*=(-i/2[pi]h)(d/d(1/x'))

(x*)K(x-`x)=(`x)K(x-`x) <==> ((1/x')*)K(1/x'-1/`x')=(1/`x')K(1/x'-1/`x') where K is the Kronecker delta function


Commutators:

[x*,p*]=ih/2[pi] <==> [(1/x')*,(1/(px')')*]=i/2[pi]h


Hamiltonians:

H*=(p*)2/2m+V(x)=-(h/2[pi])2/2m+V(x) <==> [See the 1+1 dimensional (time dependent) virtual Schroedinger's equation on page 4 of my website]

Spectra:

E=nh[nu] <==> E'=h[nu]'/n'

1/n <==> n'

[nu]=1/[tau] <==> [nu]'=1/[tau]'
 
  • #14
Jeff, I am still working out bugs in the formulation of the Hamiltonians.
 
  • #15
Hamiltonians:

H*=(p*)2/2m+V(x)=-((h/2[pi])2/2m)d2/dx2+V(x) <==>

(1/H')*=((1/p')*)22m+1/V(1/x')=-((2[pi]h)-22m)d2/d(x')2+1/V(x')
 
  • #16
Originally posted by Loren Booda


Free Particle with potential

Hamiltonians:

H*=(p*)2/2m+V(x)

Free particles by definition don't interact with any potential, so really the hamiltonian for a free particle consists of only the kinetic term, for which...

Originally posted by Loren Booda
Wavefunctions (Y):

Y=A(exp(2[pi]ixpx/h))

is the plane wave solution for a free particle of definite momentum p. However,

Originally posted by Loren Booda

Spectra:

E=nh[nu]

are the energy levels of a bound system, the quantum harmonic oscillator - though it's missing the ground state contribution h&nu;/2. The solutions to it's schrodinger equation are the hermite polynomials, not the plane wave you've given above.

In fact, only bound systems - as opposed to free ones - have quantized energy spectra.

Originally posted by Loren Booda
Commutators:

[x*,p*]=ih/2[pi] <==> [(1/x')*,(1/(px')')*]=i/2[pi]h

The classical limit in any quantum theory must always be recovered by taking h &rarr; 0, in which case we see from the usual commutation relation - you've written it on the left - that the operators X and P commute as any operators must in this limit. However, precisely the opposite happens in the commutation relation you've written on the right which indicates that it doesn't make sense.

Originally posted by Loren Booda on Loren Booda's website
T-duality, an essential symmetry of superstrings, relates to us comparable complementarity appreciated through the aesthetics of mathematics. The following two essays affirm basic physics that utilize a T-duality analog, "phase-duality," to modify first the quantum wavefunction, and secondly general relativity's metric tensor. P-duality generalizes current physical models and also introduces an "inside-out" physical perspective. As envisioned by our collective mind, this P-duality complementarity principle...

The bosonic string spectrum m2 = n2/R2+w2R2/&alpha;&prime;2+2(NL+NR-2)/&alpha;&prime; is invariant under R &rarr; &alpha;&prime;/R , n &harr; w. The reason that this "T-duality" symmetry is possible is that closed strings in addition to having momenta n like point particles, also have winding number w. This kind of symmetry related to spatial degrees of freedom is therefore not possible with ordinary point particles, and in fact what you're proposing, namely,

Originally posted by Loren Booda
Spectra:

E=nh[nu] <==> E'=h[nu]'/n'

1/n <==> n'

is not a symmetry because the "P-dual" spectrum differs from the conventional one.
 
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  • #17
Thanks, jeff, you've given me a lot of quality information to think about, the best I've received to date concerning my P-duality idea.
 
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What is wavefunction duality?

Wavefunction duality refers to the concept in quantum mechanics that a particle can exhibit both wave-like and particle-like behavior. This means that a particle's behavior can be described by both a wavefunction (describing its probability of being in a certain location) and a particle (being located at a specific point in space).

What is the significance of wavefunction duality?

The concept of wavefunction duality is significant because it challenges our classical understanding of particles as purely physical objects. It suggests that particles can exist in multiple states at the same time and can be influenced by factors such as observation. This has important implications for the foundations of quantum mechanics and our understanding of the nature of reality.

How is wavefunction duality related to the double-slit experiment?

The double-slit experiment is a classic example used to demonstrate wave-particle duality. In this experiment, a beam of particles (such as electrons) is sent through two slits, creating an interference pattern on a screen behind them. This suggests that particles can behave like waves, creating a wave-like interference pattern, rather than just behaving like discrete particles.

What is the difference between wave-particle duality and wavefunction duality?

Wave-particle duality and wavefunction duality are often used interchangeably, but they have slightly different meanings. Wave-particle duality refers to the idea that particles can exhibit both wave-like and particle-like behavior. Wavefunction duality, on the other hand, specifically refers to the idea that a particle's behavior can be described by both a wavefunction and a particle. In other words, wave-particle duality is a broader concept, while wavefunction duality is a specific example of this concept in quantum mechanics.

How does wavefunction duality impact our understanding of the universe?

Wavefunction duality challenges our classical understanding of the universe and forces us to think about the nature of reality in a different way. It has led to the development of new theories and models in physics, such as the Copenhagen interpretation, which attempts to explain the behavior of particles at the quantum level. It also has implications for technologies such as quantum computing, which rely on the principles of wavefunction duality to function.

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