Schrödinger's cat, no superposition

In summary, the conversation discusses Schrödinger's cat thought experiment and whether the cat is in a superposition of alive and dead until observed. There are differing opinions on whether the cat can actually enter a superposition and the role of amplification in the experiment. The question remains on what causes the collapse of the superposition and the role of amplification in this process.
  • #1
wsions
2
0
As the story goes Schrödinger's cat was in a quantum box with a radiation source, if the device detected a radiation leak it would trigger a device to break a vial of poison, killing the cat. The point of the story is a thought experiment as to if the cat is alive or dead before observation. According to Schrödinger, the cat is in superposition alive and dead until observed.

I was thinking that a wave function cannot "uncollapse". That cat (at some point) had to be observed, as well as all the devices inside before being put in the test box. The cat cannot jump into a wave function just to wait to be observed to fall out of superpostion.

Therefore, the cat is never in super position, it is either alive or dead... we just don't know.

What do you all think?
 
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  • #2
I think the Relational Interpretation of QM may match what you are saying.
 
  • #3
wsions said:
As the story goes Schrödinger's cat was in a quantum box with a radiation source, if the device detected a radiation leak it would trigger a device to break a vial of poison, killing the cat. The point of the story is a thought experiment as to if the cat is alive or dead before observation. According to Schrödinger, the cat is in superposition alive and dead until observed.

I was thinking that a wave function cannot "uncollapse". That cat (at some point) had to be observed, as well as all the devices inside before being put in the test box. The cat cannot jump into a wave function just to wait to be observed to fall out of superpostion.

Therefore, the cat is never in super position, it is either alive or dead... we just don't know.

What do you all think?

This is a bit silly, don't you think?

It is utterly irrelevant what goes on BEFORE you close the box. The experiment starts AFTER you close the box, because from that point onwards, the state of the cat is no longer definite.

That's like saying after I shoot photons at the double slit and observe which slit it goes through, then it can no longer be in a superposition of path even if I shoot it at ANOTHER double slit, even if I don't observe which slit it goes through.

Zz.
 
  • #4
SO if we had a double-double slit experiment it would go from superpostion, measured, collapse wave function, travel through a slit, reform wave function on the other side then go to the next two slits as a wave?
 
  • #5
wsions said:
As the story goes was Schrödinger's cat in a quantum box with a radiation source, if the device detected a radiation leak it would trigger a device to break a vial of poison, killing the cat. The point of the story is a thought experiment as to if the cat is alive or dead before observation. According to Schrödinger, the cat is in superposition alive and dead until observed.

I was thinking that a wave function cannot "uncollapse". That cat (at some point) had to be observed, as well as all the devices inside before being put in the test box. The cat cannot jump into a wave function just to wait to be observed to fall out of superpostion.

Therefore, the cat is never in super position, it is either alive or dead... we just don't know.

What do you all think?

What is ignored is the experience !
 
  • #6
Actually, I think what you are saying is very valid, and in fact I've had similar thoughts. If the cat walks in as a complicated mixed state of slightly different alive cats (the differences being too small for us to detect), then it never enters a superposition of alive and dead, instead it enters an even more complicated state-- a mixture of superpositions that project onto the cat subspace as something alive or dead. It's a mixture of superpositions that project onto a mixture! So then the question is, does a mixture of superposition states have the essential character of a mixed state or a superposition state? That depends on which one has the greater impact on measurements that we might do on the new system. The cat-mixture has very small differences in all those alive cats, but a decayed nucleus is an even smaller difference still. The cat paradox doesn't really work unless something really amplifies that tiny difference between the decayed and undecayed nucleus to the point where it can kill a cat (like a gun), whereas there is nothing happening in the cat that would otherwise cause it to die. So the cat mixed state matters less than the amplified state of the nucleus, so it might seem like the result is more like the superposition state than like the mixed state.

But a question remains-- what happens in that amplification process? This I feel is a crucial issue, because if we put a gun in there that can shoot the cat, then it is really the gun that we must wonder about, not the cat-- if the gun is in a superposition state of shot and unshot, then the cat will be in a superposition state of dead and alive. But how did the gun get into that superposition state? A nucleus can't make a gun fire, so what amplified the outcome?

So it is the amplification issue that is at the heart of the cat paradox, and it is also at the heart of the collapse of a measurement when you read a pointer that says if the nucleus decayed or not. Schroedinger is just asking the question, why don't we ever perceive classical pointers as being in superposition states when they are coupled to quantum systems? The equations of quantum mechanics suggest that if we have a closed system that couples a macro system to a quantum superposition, and amplify the importance of the quantum superposition, then the macro system should take on the character of that superposition.

But for some reason, amplification just doesn't do that, or at least we don't perceive it to do that-- instead, something in the amplification process confers the properties of the macro mixed state onto the quantum system, not the other way around. In a sense, our effort to amplify the importance of that quantum superposition has been foiled by the mixed state we coupled it to, and the superposition was somehow "lost in amplification." That would be the Copenhagen perspective, anyway, but I think this line of thinking is fruitful because we might actually be able to actually track how the superposition was lost in amplification, which might adjudicate between the various interpretations in a way that is currently not a part of the theory of quantum mechanics.
 
  • #7
Our knowledge comes from practice, in essence, is an incomplete induction, we have no reason to require that natural must promised to us always give the same answer to us
 
  • #8
When is superposition lost? After something interacts with the system strongly enough to cause a significant change?
 

1. What is Schrödinger's cat, no superposition?

Schrödinger's cat, no superposition, refers to a thought experiment proposed by Austrian physicist Erwin Schrödinger in 1935. In this experiment, a cat is placed in a sealed box with a vial of poison, a radioactive substance, and a Geiger counter. According to quantum mechanics, the cat exists in a state of superposition, meaning it is both alive and dead until an observer opens the box. However, in Schrödinger's version of the experiment, the cat is not in a state of superposition and is either alive or dead when the box is opened.

2. What is the significance of Schrödinger's cat, no superposition?

Schrödinger's cat, no superposition, helps illustrate the paradoxical nature of quantum mechanics, where particles can exist in multiple states simultaneously. It also highlights the role of observation in determining the state of a particle, as well as the limitations of classical physics in understanding the behavior of particles at the quantum level.

3. Is Schrödinger's cat, no superposition, a real experiment?

No, Schrödinger's cat, no superposition, is strictly a thought experiment and has not been physically carried out. It was proposed as a way to critique the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics and to highlight the unusual implications of the theory.

4. Can Schrödinger's cat, no superposition, be applied to other scenarios?

Yes, the concept of superposition and the role of observation in determining the state of a particle can be applied to other scenarios in quantum mechanics. Schrödinger's cat, no superposition, is just one example used to explain these concepts.

5. What are the different interpretations of Schrödinger's cat, no superposition?

There are various interpretations of Schrödinger's cat, no superposition, including the Copenhagen interpretation, the many-worlds interpretation, and the consistent histories interpretation. Each of these interpretations offers a different way of understanding the paradoxical nature of quantum mechanics and the role of observation in determining the state of particles.

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