Experimental proposal for the Dynamical Spacetime approach to wavefunction collapse
Garrelt Quandt-Wiese

TL;DR
This paper proposes an experiment to test the Dynamical Spacetime approach to wavefunction collapse, aiming to observe deviations from Born's rule in solid superpositions with precise timing and environmental control.
Contribution
It introduces a novel experimental setup to verify the Dynamical Spacetime model's predictions, including deviations from Born's rule, using room-temperature measurements.
Findings
Predicted increase in reduction probability by a factor of 1.5
Experiment feasible with a few hundred measurements
Setup can operate at room temperature
Abstract
An experiment for checking the Dynamical Spacetime approach to wavefunction collapse is proposed. The Dynamical Spacetime approach predicts deviations from Born's rule, when a solid evolves into a three-state superposition, and when the displacement between the superposed states is, at the reduction point in time, significantly larger than the spatial variation of the solids nuclei, being typically on the order of a tenth of an Angstroem. The solid is brought into the three-state superposition by splitting a photon into three beams and by detecting it in each beam by avalanche photodiodes, which displace the solid at different distances with the help of a piezoactuator. The challenge of the experiment is the precise prediction of the setup's reduction point in time to ensure a sufficient separation between the states at this point in time. This is addressed by avoiding interactions of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Mechanics and Applications · Biofield Effects and Biophysics · Quantum Electrodynamics and Casimir Effect
