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Questions tagged [quantum-mechanics]

Quantum mechanics describes the microscopic properties of nature in a regime where classical mechanics no longer applies. It explains phenomena such as the wave-particle duality, quantization of energy, and the uncertainty principle and is generally used in single-body systems. Use the quantum-field-theory tag for the theory of many-body quantum-mechanical systems.

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I have a coherent-state path integral of complex scalar fields $\psi^+,\psi^-$ which I want to integrate out, but the linear terms are operators. $$ \mathbb{P}(t) = \int D[\psi^+]D[\psi^-] \exp(S_0)T\...
user1830663's user avatar
5 votes
3 answers
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Given two bosonic operators $A$, $B$ (in the Heisenberg picture) in a QFT, the time-ordered product of $A$ and $B$ is defined as $$ T\{A(t_1)B(t_2)\}=\theta(t_1-t_2)A(t_1)B(t_2)+\theta(t_2-t_1)B(t_2)A(...
Hezaraki 's user avatar
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I’ve been developing a toy model where each particle evolves in two time parameters: A classical propagation time t and an internal oscillatory time τ(t). Youtube here The transverse coordinate is ...
Daniël Tom's user avatar
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I would like to ask whether the following conceptual framework is mathematically consistent within standard quantum theory and statistical mechanics. Assume the total universe is described by a pure ...
Luis García's user avatar
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From Wikipedia, Pauli has said in his Nobel lecture that "It is clear that this zero-point energy has no physical reality". This feels natural - I've always been slightly puzzled by the ...
Matthijs Van den Brink's user avatar
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2 answers
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Suppose we perform the usual double-slit experiment, but we place a perfectly isolated box with a one-slit input and output before the initial double slits. Inside the box, a double-slit experiment ...
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1 answer
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I am learning quantum mechanics and am confused about the double slit experiment involving shooting of a single photon at a time through the slits. It is said in the books that if we try to measure ...
user1229009's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
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If two operators commute, they share simultaneous eigenvectors. I understand the proof of this statement, however, I'm trying to gain physical insight as to what this means practically. When two ...
user30517380's user avatar
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Abstract Modern physics is fragmented across multiple frameworks - string theory, quantum field theory, loop quantum gravity, causal set theory, and emergent spacetime models - each accurately ...
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I'm developing a theoretical framework where fundamental mathematical constants π (3.14159...), e (2.71828...), and φ (1.61803...) are treated as compactified dimensions in an extended spacetime. Core ...
ahmed fathy's user avatar
2 votes
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By test space I specifically mean this (RG) (see Section 5.1 for formal definition). A somewhat more thorough (and more specific) treatment is the article "Test Spaces" by Alexander Wilce, ...
John Forkosh's user avatar
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Consider a (non-relativistic, zero-temperature) system of $N$ negatively charged fermions and $M$ (static) positively charged nuclei which obeys the stability of the second kind: Roughly speaking, the ...
Tobias Fünke's user avatar
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In quantum mechanics, a 1D wavefunction $\psi(x)$ is generally a complex-valued function of the spatial coordinate $x$. It is usually required to be square-integrable and sufficiently smooth so that ...
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In my understanding of Quantum mechanics, which is demonstrably limited, Operators have corresponding observables. I imagine it like operators helping draw a graph, with probability on the y-axis and ...
OdinOblivion's user avatar
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145 views

The equations of classical physics are time reversible -- unchanged when $t$ is replaced by $-t$. The Schrodinger equation in quantum mechanics is time reversible -- unchanged when $t$ is replaced by ...
Maurice Mizrahi's user avatar

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