The Impact of Cosmology on Quantum Mechanics
James B. Hartle (University of California, Santa Barbara)

TL;DR
This paper discusses how traditional quantum mechanics is inadequate for cosmology and explores more general frameworks like decoherent histories quantum theory, emphasizing the need for theories that accommodate the universe's quantum nature without classical observers.
Contribution
It analyzes limitations of Copenhagen quantum mechanics in cosmology and advocates for the decoherent histories approach as a more suitable framework.
Findings
Copenhagen quantum mechanics cannot handle the early universe's conditions.
Decoherent histories quantum theory addresses measurement and retrodiction issues.
Further generalizations of quantum theory for cosmology may still be necessary.
Abstract
When quantum mechanics was developed in the '20s of the last century another revolution in physics was just starting. It began with the discovery that the universe is expanding. For a long time quantum mechanics and cosmology developed independently of one another. Yet the very discovery of the expansion would eventually draw the two subjects together because it implied the big bang where quantum mechanics wasimportant for cosmology and for understanding and predicting our observations of the universe today. Textbook (Copenhagen) formulations of quantum mechanics are inadequate for cosmology for at least four reasons: 1) They predict the outcomes of measurements made by observers. But in the very early universe no measurements were being made and no observers were around to make them. 2) Observers were outside of the system being measured. But we are interested in a theory of the whole…
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Taxonomy
TopicsComputational Physics and Python Applications
