A Causal Framework for Non-Linear Quantum Mechanics
David E. Kaplan, Surjeet Rajendran

TL;DR
This paper introduces a causal, non-linear extension to quantum mechanics that preserves key principles, explores observable effects in macroscopic systems, and discusses profound implications for technology and cosmology.
Contribution
It proposes a consistent non-linear quantum framework, analyzes its experimental bounds, and discusses its potential technological and cosmological implications.
Findings
Non-linear quantum effects can be observed in macroscopic systems.
Current experimental bounds on non-linearities are weak.
Non-linearities could enable advanced quantum technologies and influence cosmological models.
Abstract
We add non-linear and state-dependent terms to quantum field theory. We show that the resulting low-energy theory, non-linear quantum mechanics, is causal, preserves probability and permits a consistent description of the process of measurement. We explore the consequences of such terms and show that non-linear quantum effects can be observed in macroscopic systems even in the presence of de-coherence. We find that current experimental bounds on these non-linearities are weak and propose several experimental methods to significantly probe these effects. The locally exploitable effects of these non-linearities have enormous technological implications. For example, they would allow large scale parallelization of computing (in fact, any other effort) and enable quantum sensing beyond the standard quantum limit. We also expose a fundamental vulnerability of any non-linear modification of…
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