QUANTIZED DETECTOR NETWORKS: A REVIEW OF RECENT DEVELOPMENTS

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Publication:3528639

DOI10.1142/S0217979208038478zbMATH Open1178.81037arXiv0709.4198OpenAlexW2053811619MaRDI QIDQ3528639FDOQ3528639


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Publication date: 17 October 2008

Published in: International Journal of Modern Physics B (Search for Journal in Brave)

Abstract: QDN (quantized detector networks) is a description of quantum processes in which the principal focus is on observers and their apparatus, rather than on states of SUOs (systems under observation). It is a realization of Heisenberg's original instrumentalist approach to quantum physics and can deal with time dependent apparatus, multiple observers and inter-frame physics. QDN is most naturally expressed in the mathematical language of quantum computation, a language ideally suited to describe quantum experiments as processes of information exchange between observers and their apparatus. Examples in quantum optics are given, showing how the formalism deals with quantum interference, non-locality and entanglement. Particle decays, relativity and non-linearity in quantum mechanics are discussed.


Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/0709.4198




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