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You claimed you could set your invariant mass to zero somehow, which would let you travel at the speed of light. I said you can't do this. How does your above post addresses this?
Hi JP,Quote from: JPYou claimed you could set your invariant mass to zero somehow, which would let you travel at the speed of light. I said you can't do this. How does your above post addresses this?No I didn't say anything about travel "at" the speed of light... I meant instantaneous connections through the well known phenomenon of quantum tunneling... that is a lot faster than light. I am not actually claiming anything other than there are well known principles you might like to apply to this general problem... read above.
You can do this by "first" nulling the mass of the spaceship. This is what is holding the spaceship back and limiting the amount of acceleration (it also provides you with achievable sources of energy to accelerate your spaceship and also solves that difficult problem of "time dilation" which is "pushing" you rapidly into the future). The next thing is to accelerate in a controlled way ... and any force will cause an infinite acceleration on a zero mass but be sure to adjust the passage of time appropriately otherwise you will end up on the wall of the lightcone (as before) and be eternally "stuck" there. You can do this trick using certain quantum techniques which undoes the quantum exchanges occurring due to the natural passage of time.
If a particle is in a quantum superposition state you cannot determine any property and the particle remains unmeasured. It is literally an unknowable... not only for you (the observer) but also to the rest of the universe provided it is decoupled quantum mechanically. While in that state it is "protected" from observations.
Quote from: Good ElfIf a particle is in a quantum superposition state you cannot determine any property and the particle remains unmeasured. It is literally an unknowable... not only for you (the observer) but also to the rest of the universe provided it is decoupled quantum mechanically. While in that state it is "protected" from observations.That isn't true. You can know plenty about the particle. The thing you don't know is determined by how the system is set up. If you entangle electrons with respect to spin, you can know properties other than their spin. You know their masses, their charges, you can know their position and momentum (up to the uncertainty principle) and their energy.
Another thought about exceeding the speed of light: if it were possible, how would we worry about the acceleration to and from such velocities?
You may be finished debating quantum mechanics with me, but if you're going to consistently misrepresent it to others, I'm going to reply.
An example of this is what is called an eigenstate in quantum mechanics. This is just a fancy word saying that the wave function describing the particle has a definite value of some observable. For example, if an electron is in an energy eigenstate, then it has a definite energy value.
Hi JP, diverjohn, yor_on and all,Quote from: JPYou may be finished debating quantum mechanics with me, but if you're going to consistently misrepresent it to others, I'm going to reply.Fine... but please do your research and get your facts as correct as it is known and not just out of elementary texts and their simplified interpretations. I am willing to debate the issue with you but you really must do more work instead of making interpretations based on simplified theories of mechanics because I do not want to repeat myself endlessly if I am not getting across. You got to know to change the way you deal with these issues when speaking about the quantum state.
We now face an interesting situation. Recall that, by performing an appropriate measurement on the system, we know the state of the system just after the measurement. Was this the state of the system before the measurement? Not necessarily! For, prior to the measurement, the system could have been in a linear superposition of different eigenstates, with unknown (and unguessable) coefficients. It is like saying that in a coin toss experiment whose outcome is a “head”, the coin could have been in a state which was a combination of head and tail before it was tossed! Of course, this would never be the case for actual coins, governed as they are by the laws of classical physics. But then, what was the precise state of the quantum system before the measurement? The answer is: we cannot know. The Copenhagen interpretation is concerned only with outcomes of experiments. Deep philosophical questions, peculiar to quantum mechanics, now arise (Box 4).
Box 4. Is quantum mechanics complete?If we can never know the pre-measurement state of a system, is not the theory inadequate, or at least incomplete? For, after all, the system surely has an existence of its own, independent of the act of measurement! (This question is also applicable to wave mechanics, for it too cannot predict the pre-measurement state.) Numerous proposals, including a variety of so-called hidden variable theories, have been made to overcome this inadequacy, but none of these is fully satisfactory. The last word has probably not been said yet in this regard.
Your books are 1994 vintage. I do not accept that a blanket quote from a large literary work of 650 pages is any form of scholarship. Quite a bit has happened over the intervening years regarding the interpretation of QM.
Try this, along with the other references I have supplied, for a more modern approach to the interpretation...Heisenberg, Matrix Mechanics, and the Uncertainty Principle - S. Lakshmibala Check out the section on Matrix Mechanics...