What can bouncing oil droplets tell us about quantum mechanics?
Peter W. Evans, Karim P. Y. Th\`ebault

TL;DR
This paper evaluates how bouncing oil droplet experiments serve as analogue illustrations of quantum phenomena, emphasizing their role in providing how-possibly explanations rather than direct confirmation of quantum theories.
Contribution
It clarifies the epistemic function of oil droplet experiments, distinguishing analogue illustration from simulation and highlighting its value for understanding quantum ontology.
Findings
Oil droplets illustrate quantum behaviors as analogue, not simulation.
Analogue illustration offers how-possibly understanding, not confirmation.
These experiments expand inferential scope despite limited direct confirmation.
Abstract
A recent series of experiments have demonstrated that a classical fluid mechanical system, constituted by an oil droplet bouncing on a vibrating fluid surface, can be induced to display a number of behaviours previously considered to be distinctly quantum. To explain this correspondence it has been suggested that the fluid mechanical system provides a single-particle classical model of de Broglie's idiosyncratic 'double solution' pilot wave theory of quantum mechanics. In this paper we assess the epistemic function of the bouncing oil droplet experiments in relation to quantum mechanics. We find that the bouncing oil droplets are best conceived as an analogue illustration of quantum phenomena, rather than an analogue simulation, and, furthermore, that their epistemic value should be understood in terms of how-possibly explanation, rather than confirmation. Analogue illustration, unlike…
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