Pilot-wave quantum theory with a single Bohm's trajectory
Francesco Avanzini, Barbara Fresch, Giorgio J. Moro

TL;DR
This paper investigates the possibility of describing quantum systems with a single Bohm's trajectory, showing a close match between the trajectory's coordinate distribution and quantum distribution in a multi-rotor system, challenging the standard ensemble approach.
Contribution
It demonstrates that a single Bohm's trajectory can approximate quantum distributions for subsystems, providing a potential alternative to the standard statistical ensemble formulation.
Findings
Single Bohm's trajectory closely matches quantum distribution for a rotor.
The evolution exhibits rapid fluctuations and loss of correlation.
A Markov process may effectively model the trajectory dynamics.
Abstract
The representation of a quantum system as the spatial configuration of its constituents evolving in time as a trajectory under the action of the wave-function, is the main objective of the Bohm theory. However, its standard formulation is referred to the statistical ensemble of its possible trajectories. The statistical ensemble is introduced in order to establish the exact correspondence (the Born's rule) between the probability density on the spatial configurations and the quantum distribution, that is the squared modulus of the wave-function. In this work we explore the possibility of using the pilot wave theory at the level of a single Bohm's trajectory. The pilot wave theory allows a formally self-consistent representation of quantum systems as a single Bohm's trajectory, but in this case there is no room for the Born's rule at least in its standard form. We will show that a…
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