Abstract

On the Quantum Zeno Effect and Time Series Related to Quantum Measurements

Highlights

  • According to Zeno that implies that the arrow cannot move under continuous observation

  • We discuss a possibility that based on the quantum Zeno effect and certain experiments one could check whether, from the statistical point of view, a concrete system behaves like a quantum system

  • The more general version of quantum Zeno effect can be helpful to prove that the brain acts like in a quantum system

Read more

Summary

Introduction

According to Zeno that implies that the arrow cannot move under continuous observation. A general theory of the quantum Zeno effect should contain the Turing model as a special case. A number of physicists have argued in support of special models in which the rules of standard quantum mechanics are modified by the inclusion of some additional procedure according to which the reduction of the state becomes an objectively real process (objective reduction)—the system abruptly self-collapses. Like sequences of measurements that process suppresses a certain unitary time evolution in the brain.

Time Series—Classical Probability Theory
The Quantum Case of Time Series
On the Quantum Zeno Effect
Example—Arrow Paradox
Distribution of a Time Series Related to Quantum Measurements
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call