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Quote from: geordief on 03/06/2023 15:48:20Is there any other way we can reproduce that effect?And what is "long enough"?Two dots? Three?I think I can give a tentative answer to your question, which is, it depends.In experiments that demonstrate interference, it's nice to see a pattern that we can say is definitely there.But in quantum computers, the wavefunctions of two particles can be in superposition, such that it's a form of constructive or destructive interference. We arrange for this to happen that way, and so it must have a nonzero probability of occuring in that case.
Is there any other way we can reproduce that effect?And what is "long enough"?Two dots? Three?
the electromagnetic field is a connection in a fiber bundle over spacetime.
A photon is representative of the field in that it has the same dimensions as the field.
An electromagnetic force is the analog of a Newtonian mechanical force; there's a symmetry in the equations of motion for an LRC circuit and a simple pendulum.
This only tells you that Newtonian momentum has an electromagnetic equivalent, which is inductance multiplied by the current.
if optical measuring instrumentation was sufficiently sensitive might it ,in theory pick up directly the interference pattern from one ,two or three dots?
it is commonly said that as a student of physics all you will do is study the harmonic oscillator in ever increasing levels of complexity and detail.
Not complex. They are both real particles with charge and mass.
When you started this thread you ( @varsigma ) were interested in a Feynman lecture, so you might like section 27-6 of the Feynman lecture documented here: https://www.feynmanlectures.caltech.edu/II_27.htmlIn that lecture it discusses precisely how much momentum is contained in the E and B fields. In any region with non-zero E and B fields, there is a momentum density g = (1/c2 ) . E x B . That's all we need - just a non-zero E and B field, no current has to flow from somewhere to anywhere for momentum to exist in the electromagnetic field. (Minor note: It's commonly said that the momentum is "in the field" but I would prefer to say only that it is in the space permeated by those fields - i.e. avoid suggesting that the fields could hold it, just that momentum is in the space somehow when the fields are in that space).
The main problem is understanding what is meant by a "connection" and the possibility that "a fibre bundle over spacetime" meant the usual one associated with general relativity. A "connection" would then be understood as an "affine connection". However, you probably didn't mean that but just used the word "connection" to imply some relationship or link between elements of a fibre bundle that just has 4-D spacetime as a base space.
What dimensions does the field have? Do you mean length, time, mass - those sorts of dimensions OR the dimension of some linear space (the number of vectors in a basis etc.) OR a measurement of just space occupied ( 3 cm x 10 cm x 12 cm ) OR something else? i.d.k.
1. IdeaThe Aharonov-Bohm effect is a configuration of the electromagnetic field which has vanishing electric/magnetic field strength (vanishing Faraday tensor F=0) but is nevertheless non-trivial, in that the vector potential A is non-trivial. Since the vector potential affects the quantum mechanical phase on the wavefunction of electrons moving in an electromagnetic field, in such a configuration classical physics sees no effect, but the phase of quantum particles, which may be observed as a interference pattern on some screen, does.More technically, a configuration of the electromagnetic field is generally given by a circle-principal connection and an Aharonov-Bohm configuration is one coming from a flat connection, whose curvature/field strength hence vanishes, but which is itself globally non-trivial. This is only possible on spaces (spacetimes) which have a non-trivial fundamental group, hence for instance it doesn't happen on Minkowski spacetime.In practice one imagines an idealized electric current-carrying solenoid in Euclidean space. Away from the solenoid itself the magnetic field produced by it gives such a configuration.
Quote from: alancalverd on 05/06/2023 08:46:49Not complex. They are both real particles with charge and mass.In field theories particles have complex probability amplitudes.
But the probability is A2 so real particles have real distributions.
And once again you are in danger of confusing model with reality. We can predict an interference pattern by superposing wave functions, but where an individual photon/electron/buckyball goes within that distribution is entirely random. It's no big deal: you can predict the outcome distribution of an infinite number of dice throws or even coin tosses very accurately, but each throw is unpredictable. Nothing is "coded in a superposition" to determine what happens next.
In short: all global structure in field theory is controled by fiber bundles, and all the more the more the field theory is quantum and gauge. The only reason why this can be ignored to some extent is because field theory is a complex subject and maybe the majority of discussions about it concerns really only a small little perturbative local aspect of it. But this is not the reality. The QCD vacuum that we inhabit is filled with a sea of non-trivial bundles and the whole quantum structure of the laws of nature are bundle-theoretic . . .
What does the existence of energy mean, anyway?
Philosophy tries to decide which questions are meaningful; Physics just does some experiments.
nobody has ever insulted me with the title of philosopher!