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Testing quantum theory with thought experiments

Nuriya Nurgalieva, Renato Renner

2020Contemporary Physics19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Quantum mechanics is one of our most successful physical theories; its predictions agree with experimental observations to an extremely high accuracy. However, the bare formalism of quantum theory does not provide straightforward answers to seemingly simple questions: for example, how should one model systems that include agents who are themselves using quantum theory? These foundational questions may be investigated with a theorist's tool – the thought experiment. Its purpose is to turn debates about the interpretation of quantum theory into actual physics questions. In this article, we give a state-of-the-art overview on quantum thought experiments involving observers, from the basic Wigner's friend to the recent Frauchiger-Renner setup, clarifying their interpretational significance and responding to objections and criticism on the way.

Topics & Concepts

Formalism (music)Minority interpretations of quantum mechanicsTheoretical physicsInterpretations of quantum mechanicsQuantumPhysicsQuantum mechanicsSimple (philosophy)Interpretation (philosophy)CriticismCopenhagen interpretationConsistent historiesThought experimentMeasurement problemOpen quantum systemClassical physicsQuantum processEpistemologyQuantum probabilityRelational quantum mechanicsMacroscopic quantum phenomenaPhysical systemDe Broglie–Bohm theoryQuantum field theoryQuantum Mechanics and ApplicationsPhilosophy and Theoretical ScienceRelativity and Gravitational Theory
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