Collapse of Probability Distributions in Relativistic Spacetime
Hans C. Ohanian

TL;DR
This paper argues that the collapse of quantum probability distributions should occur along the past light cone to be consistent with relativity, and proposes experiments to test this Lorentz-invariant collapse model.
Contribution
It demonstrates that past-light cone collapse is necessary and consistent with Lorentz invariance, addressing issues of probability conservation in relativistic quantum mechanics.
Findings
Past-light cone collapse aligns with Lorentz invariance.
Objections to light cone collapse are invalid.
Proposes feasible interferometer experiments to test the theory.
Abstract
The collapse of a spatial probability distribution is triggered by a measurement at a given spacetime point. It is customarily assumed that this collapse occurs along an equal-time hypersurface, say, t = 0. However, such a na\"ive instantaneous collapse process is inconsistent with relativity, because the equal-time hypersurfaces of different inertial reference frames are different. The attempts at implementation of instantaneous collapse in several different reference frames then lead to violations of probability conservation and violations of the scalar character of the probability contained in given volume elements. This problem affects not only the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics, but also other interpretations in which it is still necessary to specify what changes in probabilities occur when and where in a manner consistent with relativistic spacetime geometry. In…
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Taxonomy
TopicsProbability and Statistical Research · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories · Radioactive Decay and Measurement Techniques
