Quantum measurement and quantum gravity : many-worlds or collapse of the wave-function?
T. P. Singh (Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, Mumbai)

TL;DR
This paper argues that a reformulation of quantum mechanics, incorporating non-linearity at the Planck scale via noncommutative geometry, favors wave-function collapse over many-worlds interpretation and proposes experimental tests.
Contribution
It introduces a non-linear reformulation of quantum mechanics based on noncommutative geometry that explains wave-function collapse and predicts superposition lifetimes.
Findings
Derivation of a non-linear Schrödinger equation from noncommutative geometry
Explanation of wave-function collapse within a modified quantum framework
Proposal of experimental tests for the collapse model
Abstract
At present, there are two possible, and equally plausible, explanations for the physics of quantum measurement. The first explanation, known as the many-worlds interpretation, does not require any modification of quantum mechanics, and asserts that at the time of measurement the Universe splits into many branches, one branch for every possible alternative. The various branches do not interfere with each other because of decoherence, thus providing a picture broadly consistent with the observed Universe. The second explanation, which requires quantum mechanics to be modified from its presently known form, is that at the time of measurement the wave-function collapses into one of the possible alternatives. The two explanations are mutually exclusive, and up until now, no theoretical reasoning has been put forward to choose one explanation over the other. In this article, we provide an…
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