I believe that Christian's model cannot be reproduced in flatland. It would
need a kind of Möbius strip in space-time which alters the measurement
outcomes (the measurement outcomes which Alice and Bob
saw and collected in their respective labs) as they bring them back in their
space-ships, from their labs on distant planets on distant galaxies,
back to the main lab on Planet Earth.
Ben6993 wrote:Richard wrote:I believe that Christian's model cannot be reproduced in flatland. It would
need a kind of Möbius strip in space-time which alters the measurement
outcomes (the measurement outcomes which Alice and Bob
saw and collected in their respective labs) as they bring them back in their
space-ships, from their labs on distant planets on distant galaxies,
back to the main lab on Planet Earth.
Should not detectors settings, and all the simulation output charts, reflect a Moibus strip nature by ranging from 0 to 4π rather than from 0 to 2π?
Susskind's online autumn 2012 lecture 2 on Supersymmetry & Grand Unification describes an electron returning to its original state after a rotation of 4π. He says that if a prepared beam of electrons is split into two beams and one beam is grabbed by a magnetic field and that field is rotated by 2π, then when the two beams are recombined the interference pattern is different from what would have occurred had there been no magnetic field rotation. So the full range of magnetic field rotation, experienced by an electron, is 0 to 4π in the laboratory.
Zen wrote:Dear Joy,
Regarding this complete.pdf document, would you please accept a minor change and say that?
Can you write down a single pairsuch that
for every
?
Just a single pair, please. I just need the three coordinates ofand the value of
.
I'm sorry to ask you this pedagogic example, but this will help me a lot to understand your model.
Thank you very much.
Zen.
Zen wrote:Thank you very much, Joy.
Can you give one example of a pairwith
?
Zen wrote:Joy: thank you for your prompt answer.
Is it true that?
Ben6993 wrote:Hi Joy,
Thank you for the reference to your paper. I note that it refers to a paper [6] by Y. Aharonov and L. Susskind, Phys. Rev. 158, 1237 (1967). This must be the work that Susskind referred to in his lecture. He said that he had done the experiment himself in 1967 so that fits. That is evidence of a microscopic 4π cycle of rotation for the electron whereas your paper is aiming for a demonstration of a 4π macroscopic effect.
Ben6993 wrote:Reading your paper will be a good chore for me as it looks very difficult. (But not as difficult as your S7 quantum correlations paper which is too hard to go on my todo list.) Figure 4 looks familiar! Will the derivation of Figure 4 provide a different perspective on the sawtooth v -cosine curve? I note you write (approximately) that the two curves are equivalent geodesics under different topologies.
Ben6993 wrote:I would like to have a commonsense way of knowing that if a 2π rotation represents only half a cycle for an electron, then that is incompatible with R3. I note that you and Fred claim that that effect implies S3 holds, but does anybody claim it can hold in R3? This may be relevant to my view that the simulations cannot provide a winner between flatlanders and 3spherers.
Ben6993 wrote:My own view uses the analogy of two coins placed next to one another on a table. One heads up, the other tails up. The heads coin is rotated once around the tails coin without slipping at the contact point. The tails coin is motionless throughout. I think that the initial contact point for the heads coin describes a cardiod curve. And the head design rotates by 4π. The tails coin to me represents another dimension available to the electron and interfering with its motion. And it is a dimension available at every point in space. So that fits in better with S3, I presume. But not R3?
Ben6993 wrote:I am not sure that the 4π rotation will work macroscopically. In a macroscopic rotation, by analogy the tails coin might rotate too, whereas the 4π effect required a stationary tails coin in the cardiod analogy. But that is only an analogy and I haven't read your paper yet, and the macroscopic experiment has not been done yet.
gill1109 wrote:I too am sceptical about the proposed experiment, always have been; that is exactly why I am prepared to bet heavily on its failure. If Joy wins, he will get the Nobel prize. If I win, maybe "we" will all get the igNobel prize together.
gill1109 wrote:I too am sceptical about the proposed experiment, always have been; that is exactly why I am prepared to bet heavily on its failure. If Joy wins, he will get the Nobel prize. If I win, maybe "we" will all get the igNobel prize together.
You can find demonstrations of Dirac's belt trick on the internet
Ben6993 wrote:If the effect was not found macroscopically in the experiment, I do not understand why I could not still believe in the microscopic effect. Cannot space be S3 for electrons and R3 for metal ingots?
Joy Christian wrote: Following Einstein, I want to describe our single world using a single theory, without artificial boundary between the microscopic and the macroscopic. My inspiration comes from both Einstein as well as Bell---e.g., see the quote from Bell on the homepage of my blog.
gill1109 wrote:Joy Christian wrote: Following Einstein, I want to describe our single world using a single theory, without artificial boundary between the microscopic and the macroscopic. My inspiration comes from both Einstein as well as Bell---e.g., see the quote from Bell on the homepage of my blog.
So do I! And I believe it is already there. Belavkin's "event enhanced quantum mechanics", which is equivalent to the Girardi-Rimini-Weber and Pearle Continuous Spontaneous Localization models (since 2010 available in an elegant relatistically invariant version) does the job. The interpretational problems of QM are abolished. Time to get to work and do physics within, at last, an adequate framework.
Joy Christian wrote:I have no time for Belavkin's "event enhanced quantum mechanics", or for ad hoc models like Girardi-Rimini-Weber and Pearle Continuous Spontaneous Localization models.
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