Quantum mechanics vs relativity: an experimental test of the structure of spacetime
S. A. Emelyanov

TL;DR
This paper presents an experimental test demonstrating quantum mechanics predicts spatially-discontinuous, nonlocal particle transport, challenging the applicability of Lorentz invariance and suggesting a quantum-based concept of spacetime with absolute simultaneity.
Contribution
It provides experimental evidence for quantum predictions of nonlocal transport, proposing a new quantum spacetime concept beyond relativity.
Findings
Confirmed existence of spatially-discontinuous quantum transport
Challenged the universality of Lorentz invariance in quantum phenomena
Supported a quantum concept of spacetime with absolute simultaneity
Abstract
We have performed an experimental test under the conditions of which quantum mechanics predicts a spatially-discontinuous single-particle transport. The transport is beyond the relativistic paradigm of movement in Cartesian space and therefore may well be nonlocal. Our test has demonstrated that such transport does exist. This fact opens the door for realistic interpretation of quantum mechanics insofar as the requirement of Lorentz invariance appears inapplicable to any version of quantum theory. Moreover, as quantum mechanics proposes a particle dynamics beyond the relativity, it automatically requires an adequate "quantum" concept of spacetime, for which the relativistic concept is only a limiting case. The quantum concept allows absolute simultaneity and hence revives the notion of absolute time. It also goes beyond the relativistic curvilinear Cartesian order of space to account…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Mechanics and Applications · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Noncommutative and Quantum Gravity Theories
