Born rule: quantum probability as classical probability
Ovidiu Cristinel Stoica

TL;DR
The paper derives the Born rule as a classical probability measure by extending the concept of microstate counting to quantum systems with continuous bases, suggesting a universal ontic basis for the universe.
Contribution
It presents a simple derivation of the Born rule as a classical probability, applicable to quantum systems with continuous bases, and discusses implications for the many-worlds interpretation.
Findings
Born rule derived as classical probability ratio
Continuous bases enable this derivation for quantum systems
Universal ontic basis for the entire universe proposed
Abstract
I provide a simple derivation of the Born rule as giving a classical probability, that is, the ratio of the measure of favorable states of the system to the measure of its total possible states. In classical systems, the probability is due to the fact that the same macrostate can be realized in different ways as a microstate. Despite the radical differences between quantum and classical systems, I show that the same can be applied to quantum systems, and the result is the Born rule. This works only if the basis is continuous (an eigenbasis of observables with continuous spectra), but all known physically realistic measurements involve a continuous basis (the position basis). The continuous basis is not unique, and for subsystems it depends on the observable. But for the entire universe, there are continuous bases that give the Born rule for all measurements, because all…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Mechanics and Applications · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Advanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics
