Quantum Physics from Number Theory
Tim Palmer

TL;DR
This paper derives quantum properties from number-theoretic attributes of discretised Hilbert states, proposing a p-adic fractal state-space geometry that explains quantum phenomena without wavefunction collapse.
Contribution
It introduces a novel number-theoretic, p-adic geometric framework for quantum mechanics, linking discretised Hilbert spaces to fractal state-space structures.
Findings
Quantum properties arise from number-theoretic attributes.
Bell inequality violations are due to geometric constraints.
Quantum behavior breaks down for systems larger than the Planck mass.
Abstract
The properties which give quantum mechanics its unique character - unitarity, complementarity, non-commutativity, uncertainty, nonlocality - derive from the algebraic structure of Hermitian operators acting on the wavefunction in complex Hilbert space. Because of this, the wavefunction cannot be shown to describe an ensemble of deterministic states where uncertainty simply reflects a lack of knowledge about which ensemble member describes reality. This has led to endless debates about the ontology of quantum mechanics. Here we derive these same quantum properties from number theoretic attributes of trigonometric functions applied to an explicitly ensemble-based representation of discretised complex Hilbert states. To avoid fine-tuning, the metric on state space must be -adic rather than Euclidean where determines the fineness of the discretisation. This hints at both the…
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Taxonomy
Topicsadvanced mathematical theories · Quantum Mechanics and Applications · Topological and Geometric Data Analysis
