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Title: Reverse Causation and the Transactional Interpretation


1
Reverse Causation and the Transactional
Interpretation
QuantumMechanics
  • John G. Cramer
  • Dept. of Physics, Univ. of Washington
  • Seattle, Washington 98195, USA

AAAS Pacific Division Frontiers of Time USD,
San Diego, CA, June 21, 2006
2
Outline of Talk
  • About Quantum Interpretations
  • An introduction to the Transactional
    Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics
  • A new Retro-Causality Quantum Paradox(or how to
    send messages back in time by 50 ms)

3
A Quantum Metaphor
(With apologies to Indostanis with Disabilities)
4
The Blind Menand the Elephantby John Godfrey
Saxe (1816-1887)
  • It was six men of Indostan, To learning much
    inclined, Who went to see the Elephant,
  • (Though all of them were blind), That each by
    observation, Might satisfy his mind. .
  • The First approached the Elephant, And happening
    to fall, Against his broad and sturdy side, At
    once began to bawl
  • God bless me! but the Elephant, Is very like a
    wall!
  • The Second, feeling of the tusk, Cried, Ho! what
    have we here, So very round and smooth and
    sharp? To me tis mighty clear,
  • This wonder of an Elephant, Is very like a
    spear!
  • The Third approached the animal, And happening to
    take, The squirming trunk within his hands, Thus
    boldly up and spake
  • I see, quoth he, the Elephant, Is very like
    a snake!
  • The Fourth reached out an eager hand, And felt
    about the knee. What most this wondrous beast is
    like, Is mighty plain, quoth he
  • Tis clear enough the Elephant, Is very like a
    tree!
  • The Fifth, who chanced to touch the ear, Said
    Een the blindest man, Can tell what this
    resembles most Deny the fact who can,
  • This marvel of an Elephant, Is very like a fan!
  • The Sixth no sooner had begun, About the beast to
    grope, Than, seizing on the swinging tail, That
    fell within his scope,
  • I see, quoth he, the Elephant, Is very like a
    rope!
  • And so these men of Indostan, Disputed loud and
    long, Each in his own opinion, Exceeding stiff
    and strong,
  • Though each was partly in the right, And all
    were in the wrong!
  • Moral So oft in theologic wars, The disputants,
    I ween, Rail on in utter ignorance, Of what each
    other mean,

quantum interpretational discussions
a quantum process
5
Quantum Theory andInterpretations
6
What is Quantum Mechanics?
  • Quantum mechanics is a theory. It is ourcurrent
    standard model for describingthe behavior of
    matter and energy atthe smallest scales
    (photons, atoms,nuclei, quarks, gluons, leptons,
    ).
  • Like all theories, it consists of amathematical
    formalism, plus aninterpretation of that
    formalism.
  • However, quantum mechanics differs from other
    physical theories because, while its formalism of
    has been accepted and used for 80 years, its
    interpretation remains a matter of controversy
    and debate. Like the opinions of the 6 blind men,
    there are many rival QM interpretations on the
    market (Copenhagen, Many-Worlds, ).
  • Today, however, well consider only one QM
    interpretation, the Transactional Interpretation
    of quantum mechanics.

7
The Role of an Interpretation
  • An interpretation of a formalism should
  • Provide links between the mathematical symbols of
    the formalism and elementsof the physical world
  • Neutralize the paradoxes all of themaddressing
    only a few of the formalisms interpretational
    problems is undesirable
  • Provide tools for visualization, for speculation,
    and for extension.
  • An interpretation should not have its own
    sub-formalism!
  • It should not make its own testable
    predictions, (but it may be falsifiable, if it
    is found to be inconsistent with the formalism
    and/or with experiment)!

8
Example Newtons 2nd Law
  • Formalism
  • Interpretation The vector force Fon a body
    is proportional to the productof its scalar mass
    m, which is positive,and the 2nd time derivative
    a of its vector position.
  • What this interpretation does
  • It relates the formalism to physical
    observables.
  • It avoids the paradoxes that would arise if mlt0.
  • It insures that Fa.

9
The TransactionalInterpretationof
QuantumMechanics
10
Listening to the Quantum Mechanical Formalism
  • Consider a quantum matrix element
  • ltSgt òv y S y dr3 ltf S igt
  • a y - y sandwich. What does this suggest?

Hint The complex conjugation in y is the
Wigner operator for time reversal. If y is a
retarded wave, then y is an advanced wave. If
y A ei(kr - wt) then y A ei(-kr wt)
(retarded)
(advanced)
A retarded wave carries positive energy to the
future. An advanced wave carries negative energy
to the past.
11
Maxwells Electromagnetic Wave Equation
(Classical)
  • Ñ2 Fi 1/c2 2Fi /t2
  • This is a 2nd order differential equation, which
    has two time solutions, retarded and advanced.

Conventional Approach Choose only the retarded
solution(a causality boundary condition).
Wheeler-Feynman Approach Use ½ retarded and ½
advanced(time symmetry).
12
A Wheeler-Feynman Electromagnetic Transaction
  • The emitter sends retarded and advanced waves.
    It offers to transfer energy.

13
A Wheeler-Feynman Electromagnetic Transaction
  • The emitter sends retarded and advanced waves.
    It offers to transfer energy.
  • The absorber responds with an advanced wave
    thatconfirms the transaction.

Absorber
14
A Wheeler-Feynman Electromagnetic Transaction
  • The emitter sends retarded and advanced waves.
    It offers to transfer energy.
  • The absorber responds with an advanced wave
    thatconfirms the transaction.
  • The loose ends cancel and disappear, and energy
    is transferred.

15
Overview of theTransactional Interpretation
Offer Wave The initial wave function y is
interpreted as aretarded-wave offer to form a
quantum event. Confirmation wave The conjugate
wave function y is interpreted as an
advanced-wave confirmation to proceed with the
quantum event. Transaction the Quantum
Handshake The many y y combinations present
in the QM formalism are interpreted as indicating
the formation of a forward/back-in-time standing
wave that transfers energy, momentum, and other
conserved quantities. No Observers Transactions
involving observers are no different from other
transactions Observers and their knowledge play
no special roles. No ParadoxesTransactions are
intrinsically nonlocal, and all (?) paradoxes are
resolved. Few Postulates (Economical)Heisenberg
s uncertainty principle and Borns statistical
interpretationcan be derived from the
Transactional Interpretation.
16
The QuantumTransactional Model
We apply the same logic to QM Step 1 The
emitter sendsout an offer wave Y.
17
The QuantumTransactional Model
We apply the same logic to QM Step 1 The
emitter sendsout an offer wave Y.
Step 2 The absorber responds with a
confirmation wave Y.
18
The QuantumTransactional Model
  • We apply the same logic to QM
  • Step 1 The emitter sendsout an offer wave Y.

Step 2 The absorber responds with a
confirmation wave Y.
Step 3 The process repeats until energy and
momentum is transferred and the transaction is
completed (wave function collapse).
19
The TI and theUncertainty Principle
  • The completed transactionprojects out only that
    part of the offer wave y that had been reinforced
    by the confirmation wave y (gt measurement).
  • Consequently, the transactioncan project out
    only one of two complementary variables.
  • This accounts for Heisenbergs Uncertainty
    Principle.

20
The TI and theBorn Probability Law
  • Starting from EM and theWheeler-Feynman
    approach, theE-field echo that the
    emitterreceives from the absorber isthe product
    of the retarded-waveE-field at the absorber and
    the advanced-wave E-field at the emitter.
  • Translating this to quantummechanical terms, the
    echo thatthe emitter receives from
    eachpotential absorber is yi yi, leadingto the
    Born Probability Law.

Wave amplitudehere is yy
21
Role of the Observerin the TI
  • l In the Copenhagen Interpretation,observers are
    given the special roleas Collapsers of Wave
    Functions.This leads to problems, e.g.,
    inquantum cosmology where noobservers are
    presumably present.
  • l In the Transactional Interpretation,
    transactions involving an observer are the same
    as any other transactions.
  • l Thus, the observer-centric aspects of the
    Copenhagen Interpretation are avoided.

22
Can the TI be Tested?
  • The simple answer is No!. It is the formalism
    of quantum mechanics that makes all of the
    testable predictions.
  • As long as an interpretation like the TI is
    consistent with the formalism, it will make the
    same predictions as any other valid
    interpretation, and no experimental tests are
    possible.
  • However, an interpretations may be inconsistent
    with the quantum mechanical formalism and its
    predictions.
  • If this is true, then the interpretation can be
    falsified.
  • The Transactional Interpretation follows the
    quantum formalism very closely and does not
    appear to have problems in this area.

23
The TI and Some Quantum Paradoxes
24
Paradox 1 (non-locality)Einsteins Bubble
Situation A photon is emitted from a source
having no directional preference.
25
Paradox 1 (non-locality)Einsteins Bubble
Situation A photon is emitted from a source
having no directional preference. Its
spherical wave function Y expands like an
inflating bubble.
26
Paradox 1 (non-locality)Einsteins Bubble
Situation A photon is emitted from a source
having no directional preference. Its
spherical wave function Y expands like an
inflating bubble. It reaches Detector A, and the
Y bubble pops and disappears.
  • Question (originally asked by Albert Einstein)
  • If a photon is detected at Detector A, how does
    thephotons wave function Y at the locations of
    Detectors B C know that it should vanish?

27
Paradox 1 (non-locality)Einsteins Bubble
It is as if one throws a beer bottle into Boston
Harbor. It disappears, and its quantum ripples
spread all over the Atlantic. Then in Copenhagen,
the beer bottle suddenly jumps onto the dock, and
the ripples disappear everywhere else. Thats
what quantum mechanics says happens to electrons
and photons when they move from place to place.
28
Paradox 1 (non-locality)Einsteins Bubble
  • TI Explanation
  • A transaction developsbetween the source
    anddetector A, transferring the energy there and
    blocking any similar transfer to the other
    potential detectors, due to the 1-photon
    boundary condition.
  • The transactional handshakes acts nonlocally to
    answer Einsteins question.
  • We will return to nonlocality, the EPR Paradox,
    and possible retro-causal implications later in
    the talk.

29
Paradox 2 (wave/particle)Wheelers Delayed
Choice
  • A source emits one photon.Its wave function
    passesthrough slits 1 and 2, makinginterference
    beyond the slits.
  • The observer can choose to either(a) measure
    the interference pattern at plane s1, requiring
    that the photon travels through both slits.
  • or(b) measure at which slit image it appears in
    plane s2, indicating thatit has passed only
    through slit 2.




The observer waits until after the photon has
passed the slits to decide which measurement to
do.
30
Paradox 2 (wave/particle)Wheelers Delayed
Choice
Thus, in Wheelers accountof the process,
the photon doesnot decide if it is a
particleor a wave until after it passesthe
slits, even though a particlemust pass through
only one slit while a wave must pass through both
slits. Wheeler asserts that the measurement
choice determines whether the photon is a
particle or a wave retroactively!
31
Paradox 2 (wave/particle)Wheelers Delayed
Choice
  • TI Explanation
  • If the screen at s1 is up, atransaction forms
    betweens1 and the source andinvolves waves
    passingthrough both slits 1 and 2.

32
Paradox 2 (wave/particle)Wheelers Delayed
Choice
  • TI Explanation
  • If the screen at s1 is up, atransaction forms
    betweens1 and the source andinvolves waves
    passingthrough both slits 1 and 2.
  • If the screen at s1 is down, a transaction forms
    between detectors 1 or 2 and the source S, and
    involves waves passing through only one slit.

33
Paradox 2 (wave/particle)Wheelers Delayed
Choice
  • TI Explanation
  • If the screen at s1 is up, atransaction forms
    betweens1 and the source andinvolves waves
    passingthrough both slits 1 and 2.
  • If the screen at s1 is down, a transaction forms
    between detectors 1 or 2 and the source S, and
    involves waves passing through only one slit.
  • In either case, when the measurement decision was
    made is irrelevant.

34
Paradox 3 (interference)The Afshar Experiment
  • In a Delayed Choice setup, place wires with 6
    opacity at the positions of the interference
    minima at s1
  • Place detector at 2 on plane s2 and observe the
    particles passing through slit 2.
  • Question What fraction of the light is blocked
    by the grid and not transmitted to 2? (i.e., is
    the interference pattern still there when one is
    measuring particle behavior?)

35
Paradox 3 (interference)The Afshar Experiment
No Grid 2 Slits No Loss
Grid 1 Slit 6 Loss
Grid 2 Slits lt0.1 Loss
36
Paradox 3 (interference)The Afshar Experiment
One open Wire present
Both open No Wire
Both open Wire present
37
Paradox 3 (interference)The Afshar Experiment
  • Conclusions
  • Interference is still present, even when an
    unambiguous Welcher-Weg (which-way) experiment is
    performed.
  • Measuring particle-like behavior does not
    suppress wave-like behavior, if careful
    non-interactive measurements are made.
  • It appears that light waves must pass both slits
    to create the interference, even when the photon
    passes through only one slit.

38
Paradox 3 (interference)The Afshar Experiment
destructive
  • TI Explanation The initial offer waves pass
    through both slits on their way to possible
    absorbers. At the wires, the offer waves cancel
    in first order, so that no transactions can form
    and no photons can be intercepted by the wires.
  • Therefore, the absorption by the wires should be
    very small (ltlt6) and consistent with what is
    observed.

39
A new Retro-Causality Paradox (or how to send
messages back in time by 50 ms)
40
Down-Conversion with LiIO3
41
Dopfers Position-MomentumEPR Experiment
LiIO3 Down-ConversionCrystal
Heisenberg Lens f 86 cm
HeisenbergDetector D1
UV LaserBeam
28.2o
Laser BeamStop
28.2o
f
2f
Auxiliary Lens
Double Slit System a 75 mm, d 255 mm
Position
Momentum
Double-SlitDetector D2
CoincidenceCircuit
or
Birgit Dopfer PhD Thesis U. Innsbruck, 1998.
f
2f
42
Can EPR be used for Observer-to-Observer
Communication?
  • There are theorems in the literature (Eberhard,
    Shimony, ) showing that EPR nonlocal
    observer-to-observer communication is impossible.
  • Peacock and Hepburn have shown that these
    proofs are tautological and that certain key
    assumptions are inconsistent with aspects of the
    quantum formalism (e.g., BE symmetrization).
  • Therefore, the question remains open (at least
    a crack).

43
Cramers Retrocausal Dopfer Experiment
2nd Object Plane
Transmitter
Fiber-Optics Light Pipes (n 1.5)
1
0
10km
Slit Image Plane
k1
k0
k2
1st Object Plane (Slits)
1
0
Based on a suggestion by Raymond Jensen U. Notre
Dame, 2006.
Receiver (interference or no interference?)
The signal arrives 50 ms before it is sent!
44
A Transactional Analysis ofthe Dopfer Experiment
f
2f
D1
From the point of view of the Transactional
Interpretation, the nonlocal connection between
detection events at D1 and D2 arises because the
two transactions must share a handshake at the
LiIO3 crystal, which can only be realized when
the summed energies and momenta of the two
photons equal that of the pump-laser photon that
created them. Moreover, if a photon is detected
when D2 is in the 2f position where the one of
the slit is imaged, the advanced-wave
confirmation can pass only through that slit, and
no 2-slit interference is possible. On the other
hand, , if a photon is detected when D2 is in the
f position illuminated by both slits, the
advanced-wave confirmation can pass through both
slits and 2-slit interference is present. No
barrier to retro-causation is apparent in this TI
analysis.
Advanced Wave
Retarded Wave
Retro-causalInfluence?
k1
D2
Advanced Wave
Retarded Wave
k2
LiIO3Crystal
45
Conclusions
  • The Transactional Interpretation provides a way
    of understanding the counter-intuitive aspects of
    quantum mechanics.
  • Its advance-retarded handshake provides a way of
    understanding the intrinsic nonlocality of
    quantum mechanics, while preserving the
    constraints of special relativity.
  • Among quantum interpretations, the TI is unusual
    in providing a graphic way of visualizing quantum
    processes (including quantum computing).
  • Analysis of the Dopfer Experiment with the
    Transactional Interpretation does not reveal any
    show-stopper that would prevent retrocausal
    signaling.

46
References
Transactional
  • The Transactional Interpretation of Quantum
    Mechanics, Reviews of Modern Physics 58, 647
    (1986). Available at http//www.npl.washington.e
    du/TI or at the RMP web site.
  • The Plane of the Present and the Transactional
    Paradigm of Time, Chapter 9 of Time and the
    Instant, Robin Drurie, ed., Clinamen Press, UK
    (2001) ArXiv reprint quant-ph/0507089
  • Zwei Experimente zur Interferenz von
    Zwei-Photonen Zuständen, Birgit Dopfer, PhD
    Thesis, U. Innsbruck (1998).
  • The PowerPoint version of this talk will soon be
    available at http//faculty.washington.edu/jcra
    mer

47
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