Quantum mechanics emerging from "timeless" classical dynamics
H.-T. Elze

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates how classical Hamiltonian systems with a discrete physical time can naturally give rise to quantum mechanical models, revealing an emergent quantum behavior from classical dynamics.
Contribution
It introduces a framework connecting timeless classical systems with emergent quantum mechanics using path-integral formulation and discretization techniques.
Findings
Classical systems can be described as unitary quantum models.
Emergent quantum Hamiltonians are derived from classical ones.
Discretization ensures stable groundstates in the continuum limit.
Abstract
We study classical Hamiltonian systems in which the intrinsic proper time evolution parameter is related through a probability distribution to the physical time, which is assumed to be discrete. In this way, a physical clock with discrete states is introduced, which presently is still treated as decoupled from the system. This is motivated by the recent discussion of ``timeless'' reparametrization invariant models, where discrete physical time has been constructed based on quasi-local observables. Employing the path-integral formulation of classical mechanics developed by Gozzi et al., we show that these deterministic classical systems can be naturally described as unitary quantum mechanical models. We derive the emergent quantum Hamiltonian in terms of the underlying classical one. Such Hamiltonians typically need a regularization - here performed by discretization - in order to arrive…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Mechanics and Applications · Advanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics · Spectroscopy and Quantum Chemical Studies
