This is a series of four articles each
with a separate explanation of different quantum phenomena. Each of the four
articles is a piece of a mosaic and so every one is needed to understand the
final explanation of the quantum astronomy experiment we propose, possibly
using the Allen Array Telescope and the narrow-band radio-wave detectors being
build by the SETI Institute and the University of California, Berkeley.
With the success of recent movies such as "What the &$@#
Do We Know?" and the ongoing -- and continuously surprising -- revelations of
the unexpected nature of underlying reality that have been unfolding in quantum
physics for three-quarters of a century now, it may not be particularly
surprising that the quantum nature of the universe may actually now be making
in-roads into what has previously been considered classical observational
astronomy. Quantum physics has been applied for decades to cosmology, and the
strange "singularity" physics of black holes. It is also applicable to
macroscopic effects such as Einstein-Bose condensates (extremely cold
conglomerations of material that behave in non-classical ways) as well as
neutron stars and even white dwarfs (which are kept from collapse, not by
nuclear fusion explosions but by the Pauli Exclusion Principle - a process
whereby no two elementary particles can have the same quantum state and
therefore, in a sense, not collapse into each other).
Well, congratulations if you have gotten through the first
paragraph of this essay. I can't honestly tell you that things will get better,
but I can say that to the intrepid reader things should get even more
interesting. The famous quantum physicist Richard Feynmann once said
essentially that anyone who thought he understood quantum physics did not
understand it enough to understand that he did not actually understand it! In
other words, no classical interpretation of quantum physics is the correct one.
Parallel evolving universes (one being created every time a quantum-level
choice is made), faster-than-light interconnectedness underlying everything,
nothing existing until it is observed, these are a few of the interpretations
of quantum reality that are consistent with the experiments and observations.
There are many ways we could go now in examining quantum
results. If conscious observation is needed for the creation of an electron
(this is one aspect of the Copenhagen Interpretation, the most popular version
of quantum physics interpretations), then ideas about the origin of
consciousness must be revised. If electrons in the brain create consciousness,
but electrons require consciousness to exist, one is apparently caught in
circular reasoning at best. But for this essay, we shall not discuss quantum
biology. Another path we might go down would be the application of quantum
physics to cosmology -- either the Inflationary origin of the universe, or the
Hawking evaporation of black holes, as examples. But our essay is not about
this vast field either. Today we will discuss the scaling of the simple
double-slit laboratory experiment to cosmic distances, what can truly be
called, "quantum astronomy."
The laboratory double-slit experiment contains a lot of the
best aspects of the weirdness of quantum physics. It can involve various kinds
of elementary particles, but for today's discussion we will be talking solely
about light - the particle nature of which is called the "photon." A light
shining through a small hole or slit (like in a pinhole camera) creates a spot
of light on the screen (or film, or detector). However, light shown through two
slits that are close together creates not two spots on the screen, but rather a
series of alternating bright and dark lines with the brightest line in the exact
middle of this interference pattern. This shows that light is a wave since such
a pattern results from the interference of the waves coming from slit one
(which we shall call "A") with the waves coming from slit two (which we shall
call "B"). When peaks of waves from light source A
meet peaks from light source B, they add and the bright lines are produced. Not
far to the left and right of this brightness peak, however, peaks from A meet troughs from B (because the crests of the light waves
are no longer aligned) and a dark line is produced. This alternates on either
side until the visibility of the lines fades out. This pattern is simply called
an "interference pattern" and Thomas Young used this experiment to demonstrate
the wave nature of light in the early 19th Century.
However, in the year 1900 physicist Max Planck showed that
certain other effects in physics could only be explained by light being a
particle. Many experiments followed to also show that light was indeed also a
particle (a "photon") and Albert Einstein was awarded the Nobel Prize in
physics in 1921 for his work showing that the particle nature of light could
explain the "photoelectric effect." This was an experiment whereby low energy
(red) light, when shining onto a photoelectric material, caused the material to
emit low energy (slow moving) electrons, while high energy (blue) light caused
the same material to emit high energy (fast moving) electrons. However, lots of
red light only ever produced more low energy electrons, never any high-energy
electrons. In other words, the energy could not be "saved up" but rather must
be absorbed by the electrons in the photoelectric material individually. The
conclusion was that light came in packets, little quantities, and behaved thus
as a particle as well as a wave.
So light is both a particle and a wave. OK, kind of
unexpected (like Jell-O) but perhaps not totally weird. But the double slit
experiment had another trick up its sleeve. One could send one photon (or
"quantum" of energy) through a single slit at a time, with a sufficiently long
interval in between, and eventually a spot builds up that looks just like the
one produced when a very intense (many photons) light was sent through the
slit. But then a strange thing happened. When one sends a single photon at a
time (waiting between each laser pulse, for example) toward the screen when
both slits are open, rather than two spots eventually building up opposite the
two slit openings, what eventually builds up is the interference pattern of alternating
bright and dark lines! Hmm... how can this be, if only one photon was sent
through the apparatus at a time?
The answer is that each individual photon must - in order to
have produced an interference pattern -- have gone through both slits! This,
the simplest of quantum weirdness experiments, has been the basis of many of
the unintuitive interpretations of quantum physics. We can see, perhaps, how
physicists might conclude, for example, that a particle of light is not a
particle until it is measured at the screen. It turns out that the particle of
light is rather a wave before it is measured. But it is not a wave in the
ocean-wave sense. It is not a wave of matter but rather, it turns out that it
is apparently a wave of probability. That is, the elementary particles making
up the trees, people, and planets -- what we see around us -- are apparently
just distributions of likelihood until they are measured (that is, measured or
observed). So much for the Victorian view of solid matter!
The shock of matter being largely empty space may have been
extreme enough -- if an atom were the size of a huge cathedral, then the
electrons would be dust particles floating around at all distances inside the
building, while the nucleus, or center of the atom, would be smaller than a
sugar cube. But with quantum physics, even this tenuous result would be
superseded by the atom itself not really being anything that exists until it is
measured. One might rightly ask, then, what does it mean to measure something?
And this brings us to the Uncertainly Principle first discovered by Werner
Heisenberg. Dr. Heisenberg wrote, "Some physicist would prefer to come back to
the idea of an objective real world whose smallest parts exist objectively in
the same sense as stones or trees exist independently of whether we observe
them. This however is impossible."
Perhaps that is enough to think about for now. So in the
next essay we will examine, in some detail, the uncertainty principle as it
relates to what is called "the measurement problem" in quantum physics. We
shall find that the uncertainty principle will be the key to performing the
double-slit experiment over astronomical distances, and demonstrating that
quantum effects are not just microscopic phenomena, but can be extended across
the cosmos.