Quantum Mechanics as a Reversible Diffusion Theory
Charalampos Antonakos

TL;DR
This paper presents a reversible diffusion-based interpretation of quantum mechanics, using complex probability distributions and stochastic processes to explain wave functions, superposition, and the quantum-classical transition.
Contribution
It introduces a novel probabilistic framework that interprets wave functions as complex diffusion processes, challenging traditional linear quantum mechanics and superposition concepts.
Findings
Wave function interpreted as complex probability distribution
Reversible diffusion explains Born rule probabilities
Stochastic processes account for quantum-classical transition
Abstract
This paper proposes an interpretation of quantum mechanics, relying on the time-symmetric stochastic dynamics of quantum particles and on non-classical probability theory. Our main purpose is to demonstrate that the wave function and its complex conjugate can be interpreted as complex probability distributions in two complex diffusion equations related to non-real forward and backward in time stochastic motions respectively. We say non-real because Schroedinger forward and backward diffusions describe both reversible (real trajectories) and irreversible trajectories (non-real trajectories). The reversible trajectories are the only real trajectories and are given by the intersection of those forward and backward processes. It turns out that if we translate this intersection using set-theoretic language, we are led to a reversible diffusion described by Born rule probabilities. This…
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