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by rprospero
4305 days ago
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Physicist here. In terms of predicting the "future state", it depends on what you want to call the "state". If I know the complete wave function of the system, then knowing the wave function at a future point in time is trivial. Just apply the time evolution operator. However, knowing the wave function at a given point in time doesn't tell me the position or momentum - it just tells me the probability with which I'll measure a given position or momentum. So knowing the "state" still means that my measurements will have random components. On a slightly different note, when you talk about knowing the exact position and momentum of every particle, you're not talking about overcoming a physical limitation, but a mathematical one. To put it differently, if I know that the momentum is exactly zero, I do know that the position is. The problem is that the position is NaN. If the position isn't NaN, then I know longer know the momentum isn't precisely defined. |
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But wouldn't the regular measurement cause a collapse onto a randomly-chosen eigenstate of the measured operator? That is, if we have a PRNG based on a regularly measuring the lava lamp, then to predict the state after N steps, we not only have the issue of the randomly chosen N-th measurement but also have to take into account the random results of the N-1 previous measurements, which can potentially evolve into entirely new directions.
Overall, it's difficult to place a lava lamp over human time scales, as both are far from the usual quantum/classical limits: We know that even in thousands of years’ time, Earth will still revolve mostly deterministically (in the classical sense) around the sun. Similarly, electrons will hardly ever behave deterministically. Lava lamps and a couple of years are oddly in between.