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Quantum potential

The quantum potential or quantum potentiality is a central concept of the de Broglie–Bohm formulation of quantum mechanics, introduced by David Bohm in 1952.

Initially presented under the name quantum-mechanical potential, subsequently quantum potential, it was later elaborated upon by Bohm and Basil Hiley in its interpretation as an information potential which acts on a quantum particle. It is also referred to as quantum potential energy, Bohm potential, quantum Bohm potential or Bohm quantum potential.

Quantum potential

In the framework of the de Broglie–Bohm theory, the quantum potential is a term within the Schrödinger equation which acts to guide the movement of quantum particles. The quantum potential approach introduced by Bohm[1][2] provides a physically less fundamental exposition of the idea presented by Louis de Broglie: de Broglie had postulated in 1925 that the relativistic wave function defined on spacetime represents a pilot wave which guides a quantum particle, represented as an oscillating peak in the wave field, but he had subsequently abandoned his approach because he was unable to derive the guidance equation for the particle from a non-linear wave equation. The seminal articles of Bohm in 1952 introduced the quantum potential and included answers to the objections which had been raised against the pilot wave theory.

The Bohm quantum potential is closely linked with the results of other approaches, in particular relating to work by Erwin Madelung of 1927 and to work by Carl Friedrich von Weizsäcker of 1935.

Building on the interpretation of the quantum theory introduced by Bohm in 1952, David Bohm and Basil Hiley in 1975 presented how the concept of a quantum potential leads to the notion of an "unbroken wholeness of the entire universe", proposing that the fundamental new quality introduced by quantum physics is nonlocality.[3]

Quantum potential as part of the Schrödinger equation edit

The Schrödinger equation

 

is re-written using the polar form for the wave function   with real-valued functions   and  , where   is the amplitude (absolute value) of the wave function  , and   its phase. This yields two equations: from the imaginary and real part of the Schrödinger equation follow the continuity equation and the quantum Hamilton–Jacobi equation respectively.[1][4]

Continuity equation edit

The imaginary part of the Schrödinger equation in polar form yields

 

which, provided  , can be interpreted as the continuity equation   for the probability density   and the velocity field  

Quantum Hamilton–Jacobi equation edit

The real part of the Schrödinger equation in polar form yields a modified Hamilton–Jacobi equation

 

also referred to as quantum Hamilton–Jacobi equation.[5] It differs from the classical Hamilton–Jacobi equation only by the term

 

This term  , called quantum potential, thus depends on the curvature of the amplitude of the wave function.[6][7]

In the limit  , the function   is a solution of the (classical) Hamilton–Jacobi equation;[1] therefore, the function   is also called the Hamilton–Jacobi function, or action, extended to quantum physics.

Properties edit

 
Bohm trajectories under the influence of the quantum potential, at the example of an electron going through the two-slit experiment.

Hiley emphasised several aspects[8] that regard the quantum potential of a quantum particle:

  • it is derived mathematically from the real part of the Schrödinger equation under polar decomposition of the wave function,[9] is not derived from a Hamiltonian[10] or other external source, and could be said to be involved in a self-organising process involving a basic underlying field;
  • it does not change if   is multiplied by a constant, as this term is also present in the denominator, so that   is independent of the magnitude of   and thus of field intensity; therefore, the quantum potential fulfils a precondition for nonlocality: it need not fall off as distance increases;
  • it carries information about the whole experimental arrangement in which the particle finds itself.

In 1979, Hiley and his co-workers Philippidis and Dewdney presented a full calculation on the explanation of the two-slit experiment in terms of Bohmian trajectories that arise for each particle moving under the influence of the quantum potential, resulting in the well-known interference patterns.[11]

 
Schematic of double-slit experiment in which Aharonov–Bohm effect can be observed: electrons pass through two slits, interfering at an observation screen, and the interference pattern undergoes a shift when a magnetic field B is turned on in the cylindrical solenoid.

Also the shift of the interference pattern which occurs in presence of a magnetic field in the Aharonov–Bohm effect could be explained as arising from the quantum potential.[12]

Relation to the measurement process edit

The collapse of the wave function of the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum theory is explained in the quantum potential approach by the demonstration that, after a measurement, "all the packets of the multi-dimensional wave function that do not correspond to the actual result of measurement have no effect on the particle" from then on.[13] Bohm and Hiley pointed out that

‘the quantum potential can develop unstable bifurcation points, which separate classes of particle trajectories according to the "channels" into which they eventually enter and within which they stay. This explains how measurement is possible without "collapse" of the wave function, and how all sorts of quantum processes, such as transitions between states, fusion of two states into one and fission of one system into two, are able to take place without the need for a human observer.’[14]

Measurement then "involves a participatory transformation in which both the system under observation and the observing apparatus undergo a mutual participation so that the trajectories behave in a correlated manner, becoming correlated and separated into different, non-overlapping sets (which we call ‘channels’)".[15]

Quantum potential of an n-particle system edit

The Schrödinger wave function of a many-particle quantum system cannot be represented in ordinary three-dimensional space. Rather, it is represented in configuration space, with three dimensions per particle. A single point in configuration space thus represents the configuration of the entire n-particle system as a whole.

A two-particle wave function   of identical particles of mass   has the quantum potential[16]

 

where   and   refer to particle 1 and particle 2 respectively. This expression generalizes in straightforward manner to   particles:

 

In case the wave function of two or more particles is separable, then the system's total quantum potential becomes the sum of the quantum potentials of the two particles. Exact separability is extremely unphysical given that interactions between the system and its environment destroy the factorization; however, a wave function that is a superposition of several wave functions of approximately disjoint support will factorize approximately.[17]

Derivation for a separable quantum system edit

That the wave function is separable means that   factorizes in the form  . Then it follows that also   factorizes, and the system's total quantum potential becomes the sum of the quantum potentials of the two particles.[18]

 

In case the wave function is separable, that is, if   factorizes in the form  , the two one-particle systems behave independently. More generally, the quantum potential of an  -particle system with separable wave function is the sum of   quantum potentials, separating the system into   independent one-particle systems.[19]

Formulation in terms of probability density edit

Quantum potential in terms of the probability density function edit

Bohm, as well as other physicists after him, have sought to provide evidence that the Born rule linking   to the probability density function

 

can be understood, in a pilot wave formulation, as not representing a basic law, but rather a theorem (called quantum equilibrium hypothesis) which applies when a quantum equilibrium is reached during the course of the time development under the Schrödinger equation. With Born's rule, and straightforward application of the chain and product rules

 

the quantum potential, expressed in terms of the probability density function, becomes:[20]

 

Quantum force edit

The quantum force  , expressed in terms of the probability distribution, amounts to:[21]

 

Formulation in configuration space and in momentum space, as the result of projections edit

M. R. Brown and B. Hiley showed that, as alternative to its formulation terms of configuration space ( -space), the quantum potential can also be formulated in terms of momentum space ( -space).[22][23]

In line with David Bohm's approach, Basil Hiley and mathematician Maurice de Gosson showed that the quantum potential can be seen as a consequence of a projection of an underlying structure, more specifically of a non-commutative algebraic structure, onto a subspace such as ordinary space ( -space). In algebraic terms, the quantum potential can be seen as arising from the relation between implicate and explicate orders: if a non-commutative algebra is employed to describe the non-commutative structure of the quantum formalism, it turns out that it is impossible to define an underlying space, but that rather "shadow spaces" (homomorphic spaces) can be constructed and that in so doing the quantum potential appears.[23][24][25][26][27] The quantum potential approach can be seen as a way to construct the shadow spaces.[25] The quantum potential thus results as a distortion due to the projection of the underlying space into  -space, in similar manner as a Mercator projection inevitably results in a distortion in a geographical map.[28][29] There exists complete symmetry between the  -representation, and the quantum potential as it appears in configuration space can be seen as arising from the dispersion of the momentum  -representation.[30]

The approach has been applied to extended phase space,[30][31] also in terms of a Duffin–Kemmer–Petiau algebra approach.[32][33]

Relation to other quantities and theories edit

Relation to the Fisher information edit

It can be shown[34] that the mean value of the quantum potential   is proportional to the probability density's Fisher information about the observable  

 

Using this definition for the Fisher information, we can write:[35]

 

Relation to the Madelung pressure tensor edit

In the Madelung equations presented by Erwin Madelung in 1927, the non-local quantum pressure tensor has the same mathematical form as the quantum potential. The underlying theory is different in that the Bohm approach describes particle trajectories whereas the equations of Madelung quantum hydrodynamics are the Euler equations of a fluid that describe its averaged statistical characteristics.[36]

Relation to the von Weizsäcker correction edit

In 1935,[37] Carl Friedrich von Weizsäcker proposed the addition of an inhomogeneity term (sometimes referred to as a von Weizsäcker correction) to the kinetic energy of the Thomas–Fermi (TF) theory of atoms.[38]

The von Weizsäcker correction term is[39]

 

The correction term has also been derived as the first-order correction to the TF kinetic energy in a semi-classical correction to the Hartree–Fock theory.[40]

It has been pointed out[39] that the von Weizsäcker correction term at low density takes on the same form as the quantum potential.

Quantum potential as energy of internal motion associated with spin edit

Giovanni Salesi, Erasmo Recami and co-workers showed in 1998 that, in agreement with the König's theorem, the quantum potential can be identified with the kinetic energy of the internal motion ("zitterbewegung") associated with the spin of a spin-½ particle observed in a center-of-mass frame. More specifically, they showed that the internal zitterbewegung velocity for a spinning, non-relativistic particle of constant spin with no precession, and in absence of an external field, has the squared value:[41]

 

from which the second term is shown to be of negligible size; then with   it follows that

 

Salesi gave further details on this work in 2009.[42]

In 1999, Salvatore Esposito generalized their result from spin-½ particles to particles of arbitrary spin, confirming the interpretation of the quantum potential as a kinetic energy for an internal motion. Esposito showed that (using the notation  =1) the quantum potential can be written as:[43]

 

and that the causal interpretation of quantum mechanics can be reformulated in terms of a particle velocity

 

where the "drift velocity" is

 

and the "relative velocity" is  , with

 

and   representing the spin direction of the particle. In this formulation, according to Esposito, quantum mechanics must necessarily be interpreted in probabilistic terms, for the reason that a system's initial motion condition cannot be exactly determined.[43] Esposito explained that "the quantum effects present in the Schrödinger equation are due to the presence of a peculiar spatial direction associated with the particle that, assuming the isotropy of space, can be identified with the spin of the particle itself".[44] Esposito generalized it from matter particles to gauge particles, in particular photons, for which he showed that, if modelled as  , with probability function  , they can be understood in a quantum potential approach.[45]

James R. Bogan, in 2002, published the derivation of a reciprocal transformation from the Hamilton-Jacobi equation of classical mechanics to the time-dependent Schrödinger equation of quantum mechanics which arises from a gauge transformation representing spin, under the simple requirement of conservation of probability. This spin-dependent transformation is a function of the quantum potential.[46]

EP quantum mechanics with quantum potential as Schwarzian derivative edit

In a different approach, the EP quantum mechanics formulated on the basis of an Equivalence Principle (EP), a quantum potential is written as:[47][48]

 

where   is the Schwarzian derivative, that is,  . However, even in cases where this may equal

 

it is stressed by E. Faraggi and M. Matone that this does not correspond with the usual quantum potential, as in their approach   is a solution to the Schrödinger equation but does not correspond to the wave function.[47] This has been investigated further by E.R. Floyd for the classical limit  ,[49] as well as by Robert Carroll.[50]

Re-interpretation in terms of Clifford algebras edit

B. Hiley and R. E. Callaghan re-interpret the role of the Bohm model and its notion of quantum potential in the framework of Clifford algebra, taking account of recent advances that include the work of David Hestenes on spacetime algebra. They show how, within a nested hierarchy of Clifford algebras  , for each Clifford algebra an element of a minimal left ideal   and an element of a right ideal representing its Clifford conjugation   can be constructed, and from it the Clifford density element (CDE)  , an element of the Clifford algebra which is isomorphic to the standard density matrix but independent of any specific representation.[51] On this basis, bilinear invariants can be formed which represent properties of the system. Hiley and Callaghan distinguish bilinear invariants of a first kind, of which each stands for the expectation value of an element   of the algebra which can be formed as  , and bilinear invariants of a second kind which are constructed with derivatives and represent momentum and energy. Using these terms, they reconstruct the results of quantum mechanics without depending on a particular representation in terms of a wave function nor requiring reference to an external Hilbert space. Consistent with earlier results, the quantum potential of a non-relativistic particle with spin (Pauli particle) is shown to have an additional spin-dependent term, and the momentum of a relativistic particle with spin (Dirac particle) is shown to consist in a linear motion and a rotational part.[52] The two dynamical equations governing the time evolution are re-interpreted as conservation equations. One of them stands for the conservation of energy; the other stands for the conservation of probability and of spin.[53] The quantum potential plays the role of an internal energy[54] which ensures the conservation of total energy.[53]

Relativistic and field-theoretic extensions edit

Quantum potential and relativity edit

Bohm and Hiley demonstrated that the non-locality of quantum theory can be understood as limit case of a purely local theory, provided the transmission of active information is allowed to be greater than the speed of light, and that this limit case yields approximations to both quantum theory and relativity.[55]

The quantum potential approach was extended by Hiley and co-workers to quantum field theory in Minkowski spacetime[56][57][58][59] and to curved spacetime.[60]

Carlo Castro and Jorge Mahecha derived the Schrödinger equation from the Hamilton-Jacobi equation in conjunction with the continuity equation, and showed that the properties of the relativistic Bohm quantum potential in terms of the ensemble density can be described by the Weyl properties of space. In Riemann flat space, the Bohm potential is shown to equal the Weyl curvature. According to Castro and Mahecha, in the relativistic case, the quantum potential (using the d'Alembert operator   and in the notation  ) takes the form

 

and the quantum force exerted by the relativistic quantum potential is shown to depend on the Weyl gauge potential and its derivatives. Furthermore, the relationship among Bohm's potential and the Weyl curvature in flat spacetime corresponds to a similar relationship among Fisher Information and Weyl geometry after introduction of a complex momentum.[61]

Diego L. Rapoport, on the other hand, associates the relativistic quantum potential with the metric scalar curvature (Riemann curvature).[62]

In relation to the Klein–Gordon equation for a particle with mass and charge, Peter R. Holland spoke in his book of 1993 of a ‘quantum potential-like term’ that is proportional  . He emphasized however that to give the Klein–Gordon theory a single-particle interpretation in terms of trajectories, as can be done for nonrelativistic Schrödinger quantum mechanics, would lead to unacceptable inconsistencies. For instance, wave functions   that are solutions to the Klein–Gordon or the Dirac equation cannot be interpreted as the probability amplitude for a particle to be found in a given volume   at time   in accordance with the usual axioms of quantum mechanics, and similarly in the causal interpretation it cannot be interpreted as the probability for the particle to be in that volume at that time. Holland pointed out that, while efforts have been made to determine a Hermitian position operator that would allow an interpretation of configuration space quantum field theory, in particular using the Newton–Wigner localization approach, but that no connection with possibilities for an empirical determination of position in terms of a relativistic measurement theory or for a trajectory interpretation has so far been established. Yet according to Holland this does not mean that the trajectory concept is to be discarded from considerations of relativistic quantum mechanics.[63]

Hrvoje Nikolić derived   as expression for the quantum potential, and he proposed a Lorentz-covariant formulation of the Bohmian interpretation of many-particle wave functions.[64] He also developed a generalized relativistic-invariant probabilistic interpretation of quantum theory,[65][66][67] in which   is no longer a probability density in space but a probability density in space-time.[68][69]

Quantum potential in quantum field theory edit

Starting from the space representation of the field coordinate, a causal interpretation of the Schrödinger picture of relativistic quantum theory has been constructed. The Schrödinger picture for a neutral, spin 0, massless field  , with   real-valued functionals, can be shown[70] to lead to

 

This has been called the superquantum potential by Bohm and his co-workers.[71]

Basil Hiley showed that the energy–momentum-relations in the Bohm model can be obtained directly from the energy–momentum tensor of quantum field theory and that the quantum potential is an energy term that is required for local energy–momentum conservation.[72] He has also hinted that for particle with energies equal to or higher than the pair creation threshold, Bohm's model constitutes a many-particle theory that describes also pair creation and annihilation processes.[73]

Interpretation and naming of the quantum potential edit

In his article of 1952, providing an alternative interpretation of quantum mechanics, Bohm already spoke of a "quantum-mechanical" potential.[74]

Bohm and Basil Hiley also called the quantum potential an information potential, given that it influences the form of processes and is itself shaped by the environment.[10] Bohm indicated "The ship or aeroplane (with its automatic Pilot) is a self-active system, i.e. it has its own energy. But the form of its activity is determined by the information content concerning its environment that is carried by the radar waves. This is independent of the intensity of the waves. We can similarly regard the quantum potential as containing active information. It is potentially active everywhere, but actually active only where and when there is a particle." (italics in original).[75]

Hiley refers to the quantum potential as internal energy[25] and as "a new quality of energy only playing a role in quantum processes".[76] He explains that the quantum potential is a further energy term aside the well-known kinetic energy and the (classical) potential energy and that it is a nonlocal energy term that arises necessarily in view of the requirement of energy conservation; he added that much of the physics community's resistance against the notion of the quantum potential may have been due to scientists' expectations that energy should be local.[77]

Hiley has emphasized that the quantum potential, for Bohm, was "a key element in gaining insights into what could underlie the quantum formalism. Bohm was convinced by his deeper analysis of this aspect of the approach that the theory could not be mechanical. Rather, it is organic in the sense of Whitehead. Namely, that it was the whole that determined the properties of the individual particles and their relationship, not the other way round."[78][79]

Peter R. Holland, in his comprehensive textbook, also refers to it as quantum potential energy.[80] The quantum potential is also referred to in association with Bohm's name as Bohm potential, quantum Bohm potential or Bohm quantum potential.

Applications edit

The quantum potential approach can be used to model quantum effects without requiring the Schrödinger equation to be explicitly solved, and it can be integrated in simulations, such as Monte Carlo simulations using the hydrodynamic and drift diffusion equations.[81] This is done in form of a "hydrodynamic" calculation of trajectories: starting from the density at each "fluid element", the acceleration of each "fluid element" is computed from the gradient of   and  , and the resulting divergence of the velocity field determines the change to the density.[82]

The approach using Bohmian trajectories and the quantum potential is used for calculating properties of quantum systems which cannot be solved exactly, which are often approximated using semi-classical approaches. Whereas in mean field approaches the potential for the classical motion results from an average over wave functions, this approach does not require the computation of an integral over wave functions.[83]

The expression for the quantum force has been used, together with Bayesian statistical analysis and Expectation-maximisation methods, for computing ensembles of trajectories that arise under the influence of classical and quantum forces.[21]

Further reading edit

Fundamental articles edit

  • Bohm, David (1952). "A Suggested Interpretation of the Quantum Theory in Terms of "Hidden Variables" I". Physical Review. 85 (2): 166–179. Bibcode:1952PhRv...85..166B. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.85.166. ()
  • Bohm, David (1952). "A Suggested Interpretation of the Quantum Theory in Terms of "Hidden Variables", II". Physical Review. 85 (2): 180–193. Bibcode:1952PhRv...85..180B. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.85.180. ()
  • D. Bohm, B. J. Hiley, P. N. Kaloyerou: An ontological basis for the quantum theory, Physics Reports (Review section of Physics Letters), volume 144, number 6, pp. 321–375, 1987 (full text 2012-03-19 at the Wayback Machine), therein: D. Bohm, B. J. Hiley: I. Non-relativistic particle systems, pp. 321–348, and D. Bohm, B. J. Hiley, P. N. Kaloyerou: II. A causal interpretation of quantum fields, pp. 349–375

Recent articles edit

  • Spontaneous creation of the universe from nothing, arXiv:1404.1207v1, 4 April 2014
  • Maurice de Gosson, Basil Hiley: Short Time Quantum Propagator and Bohmian Trajectories, arXiv:1304.4771v1 (submitted 17 April 2013)
  • Robert Carroll: Fluctuations, gravity, and the quantum potential, 13 January 2005, asXiv:gr-qc/0501045v1

Overview edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Bohm, David (1952). "A Suggested Interpretation of the Quantum Theory in Terms of "Hidden Variables" I". Physical Review. 85 (2): 166–179. Bibcode:1952PhRv...85..166B. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.85.166. (full text 2012-10-18 at the Wayback Machine)
  2. ^ Bohm, David (1952). "A Suggested Interpretation of the Quantum Theory in Terms of "Hidden Variables", II". Physical Review. 85 (2): 180–193. Bibcode:1952PhRv...85..180B. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.85.180. (full text 2012-10-18 at the Wayback Machine)
  3. ^ D. Bohm, B. J. Hiley: On the intuitive understanding of nonlocality as implied by quantum theory, Foundations of Physics, Volume 5, Number 1, pp. 93-109, 1975, doi:10.1007/BF01100319 (abstract)
  4. ^ David Bohm, Basil Hiley: The Undivided Universe: An Ontological Interpretation of Quantum Theory, Routledge, 1993, ISBN 0-415-06588-7, therein Chapter 3.1. The main points of the causal interpretation, p. 22–23.
  5. ^ David Bohm, Basil Hiley: The Undivided Universe: An Ontological Interpretation of Quantum Theory, Routledge, 1993, ISBN 0-415-06588-7, also as cited in: B. J. Hiley and R. E. Callaghan: Clifford Algebras and the Dirac-Bohm Quantum Hamilton-Jacobi Equation, Foundations of Physics, January 2012, Volume 42, Issue 1, pp 192-208 (published online 20 May 2011), doi:10.1007/s10701-011-9558-z (abstract, 2010 preprint by B. Hiley)
  6. ^ See for ex. Robert E. Wyatt, Eric R. Bittner: Quantum wave packet dynamics with trajectories: Implementation with adaptive Lagrangian grids of the amplitude of the wave function, Journal of Chemical Physics, vol. 113, no. 20, 22 November 2000, p. 8898 2011-10-02 at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ See also: Pilot wave#Mathematical formulation for a single particle
  8. ^ B. J. Hiley: Active Information and Teleportation, p. 7; appeared in: Epistemological and Experimental Perspectives on Quantum Physics, D. Greenberger et al. (eds.), pages 113-126, Kluwer, Netherlands, 1999
  9. ^ B.J. Hiley: From the Heisenberg picture to Bohm: A New Perspective on Active Information and it Relation to Shannon Information, pp. 2 and 5. Published in: A. Khrennikov (ed.): Proc. Conf. Quantum Theory: reconsideration of foundations, pp. 141–162, Vaxjö University Press, Sweden, 2002
  10. ^ a b B. J. Hiley: Information, quantum theory and the brain. In: Gordon G. Globus (ed.), Karl H. Pribram (ed.), Giuseppe Vitiello (ed.): Brain and being: at the boundary between science, philosophy, language and arts, Advances in Consciousness Research, John Benjamins B.V., 2004, ISBN 90-272-5194-0, pp. 197-214, p. 207
  11. ^ C. Philippidis, C. Dewdney, B. J. Hiley: Quantum interference and the quantum potential, Il nuovo cimento B, vol. 52, no. 1, 1979, pp.15-28, doi:10.1007/BF02743566
  12. ^ C. Philippidis, D. Bohm, R. D. Kaye: The Aharonov-Bohm effect and the quantum potential, Il nuovo cimento B, vol. 71, no. 1, pp. 75-88, 1982, doi:10.1007/BF02721695
  13. ^ Basil J. Hiley: The role of the quantum potential. In: G. Tarozzi, Alwyn Van der Merwe: Open questions in quantum physics: invited papers on the foundations of microphysics, Springer, 1985, pages 237 ff., therein page 239
  14. ^ D. Bohm, B. J. Hiley, P. N. Kaloyerou: An ontological basis for the quantum theory, Physics Reports (Review section of Physics Letters), volume 144, number 6, pp. 323–348, 1987 (abstract) 2012-03-19 at the Wayback Machine
  15. ^ B. J. Hiley: The conceptual structure of the Bohm interpretation of quantum mechanics, In: K. V. Laurikainen [fi], C. Montonen, K. Sunnarborg (eds.): Symposium on the Foundations of Modern Physics 1994 – 70 years of Matter Waves, Editions Frontières, pp. 99–118, ISBN 2-86332-169-2, p. 106
  16. ^ B. J. Hiley: Active Information and Teleportation, p. 10; appeared in: Epistemological and Experimental Perspectives on Quantum Physics, D. Greenberger et al. (eds.), pages 113-126, Kluwer, Netherlands, 1999
  17. ^ See for instance Detlef Dürr et al: Quantum equilibrium and the origin of absolute uncertainty, arXiv:quant-ph/0308039v1 6 August 2003, p. 23 ff.
  18. ^ David Bohm, Basil Hiley: The Undivided Universe: An Ontological Interpretation of Quantum Theory, Routledge, 1993, ISBN 0-415-06588-7, transferred to digital printing 2005, therein Chapter 4.1. The ontological interpretation of the many-body system, p. 59
  19. ^ D. Bohm, B. J. Hiley, P. N. Kaloyerou: An ontological basis for the quantum theory, Physics Reports (Review section of Physics Letters), volume 144, number 6, pp. 323–348, 1987 (p. 351, eq. (12) 2012-03-19 at the Wayback Machine<--page=31 p. 351 is not(!) a typo-->
  20. ^ See for example the Introduction section of: Fernando Ogiba: Phenomenological derivation of the Schrödinger equation 2011-10-11 at the Wayback Machine, Progress in Physics (indicated date: October 2011, but retrieved online earlier: July 31, 2011)
  21. ^ a b Jeremy B. Maddox, Eric R. Bittner: Estimating Bohm’s quantum force using Bayesian statistics 2011-11-20 at the Wayback Machine, Journal of Chemical Physics, October 2003, vol. 119, no. 13, p. 6465–6474, therein p. 6472, eq.(38)
  22. ^ M. R. Brown: The quantum potential: the breakdown of classical symplectic symmetry and the energy of localisation and dispersion, arXiv.org (submitted on 6 Mar 1997, version of 5 Feb 2002, retrieved 24 July 2011) (abstract)
  23. ^ a b M. R. Brown, B. J. Hiley: Schrodinger revisited: an algebraic approach, arXiv.org (submitted 4 May 2000, version of 19 July 2004, retrieved June 3, 2011) (abstract)
  24. ^ Maurice A. de Gosson: "The Principles of Newtonian and Quantum Mechanics – The Need for Planck's Constant, h", Imperial College Press, World Scientific Publishing, 2001, ISBN 1-86094-274-1
  25. ^ a b c B. J. Hiley: Non-commutative quantum geometry: A reappraisal of the Bohm approach to quantum theory, in: A. Elitzur et al. (eds.): Quo vadis quantum mechanics, Springer, 2005, ISBN 3-540-22188-3, p. 299–324
  26. ^ B.J. Hiley: Non-Commutative Quantum Geometry: A Reappraisal of the Bohm Approach to Quantum Theory. In: Avshalom C. Elitzur, Shahar Dolev, Nancy Kolenda (eds.): Quo Vadis Quantum Mechanics? The Frontiers Collection, 2005, pp. 299-324, doi:10.1007/3-540-26669-0_16 (abstract, preprint)
  27. ^ B.J. Hiley: Phase space description of quantum mechanics and non-commutative geometry: Wigner–Moyal and Bohm in a wider context, In: Theo M. Nieuwenhuizen et al (eds.): Beyond the quantum, World Scientific Publishing, 2007, ISBN 978-981-277-117-9, pp. 203–211, therein p. 204
  28. ^ Basil J. Hiley: Towards a Dynamics of Moments: The Role of Algebraic Deformation and Inequivalent Vacuum States, published in: Correlations ed. K. G. Bowden, Proc. ANPA 23, 104-134, 2001 (PDF)
  29. ^ B. J. Hiley, R. E. Callaghan: The Clifford Algebra approach to Quantum Mechanics A: The Schroedinger and Pauli Particles, arXiv.org (submitted on 17 Nov 2010 - abstract)
  30. ^ a b B. Hiley: Phase space description of quantum mechanics and non-commutative geometry: Wigner-Moyal and Bohm in a wider context, in: Th. M. Nieuwenhuizen et al. (eds.): Beyond the Quantum, World Scientific, 2007, ISBN 978-981-277-117-9, p. 203–211, therein: p. 207 ff.
  31. ^ S. Nasiri: Quantum potential and symmetries in extended phase space, SIGMA 2 (2006), 062, quant-ph/0511125
  32. ^ Marco Cezar B. Fernandes, J. David M. Vianna: On the Generalized Phase Space Approach to Duffin–Kemmer–Petiau Particles, Brazilian Journal of Physics, vol. 28, no. 4. December 1998, doi:10.1590/S0103-97331998000400024
  33. ^ M.C.B. Fernandes, J.D.M. Vianna: On the Duffin-Kemmer-Petiau algebra and the generalized phase space, Foundations of Physics, vol. 29, no. 2, 1999 (abstract)
  34. ^ M. Reginatto, Phys. Rev. A 58, 1775 (1998), cited after: Roumen Tsekov: Towards nonlinear quantum Fokker‐Planck equations, Int. J. Theor. Phys. 48 (2009) 1431–1435 (arXiv 0808.0326, p. 4).
  35. ^ Robert Carroll: On the Emergence Theme of Physics, World Scientific, 2010, ISBN 981-4291-79-X, Chapter 1 Some quantum background, p. 1.
  36. ^ Tsekov, R. (2012) Bohmian Mechanics versus Madelung Quantum Hydrodynamics doi:10.13140/RG.2.1.3663.8245
  37. ^ C. F. von Weizsäcker: Zur Theorie der Kernmassen, Zeitschrift für Physik, Volume 96, pp. 431–458 (1935).
  38. ^ See also section "Introduction" of: Rafael Benguria, Haim Brezis, Elliott H. Lieb: The Thomas–Fermi–von Weizsäcker theory of atoms and molecules, Commun. Math. Phys., Volume 79, pp. 167–180 (1981), doi:10.1007/BF01942059.
  39. ^ a b See also Roumen Tsekov: Dissipative time dependent density functional theory, Int. J. Theor. Phys., Vol. 48, pp. 2660–2664 (2009), arXiv:0903.3644.
  40. ^ Kompaneets, Alexander Solomonovich; Pavlovskii, E. S.; Sov. Phys. JETP, volume 4, pp. 328–336 (1957). Cited in section "Introduction" of: Rafael Benguria, Haim Brezis, Elliott H. Lieb: The Thomas–Fermi–von Weizsäcker theory of atoms and molecules, Commun. Math. Phys., volume 79, pp. 167–180 (1981), doi:10.1007/BF01942059.
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  42. ^ G. Salesi: Spin and Madelung fluid, submitted 23 June 2009, arXiv:quant-ph/0906.4147v1
  43. ^ a b Salvatore Esposito: On the role of spin in quantum mechanics, submitted 5 February 1999, arXiv:quant-ph/9902019v1
  44. ^ p. 7
  45. ^ S. Esposito: Photon wave mechanics: A de Broglie–Bohm approach, p. 8 ff.
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quantum, potential, quantum, potential, quantum, potentiality, central, concept, broglie, bohm, formulation, quantum, mechanics, introduced, david, bohm, 1952, initially, presented, under, name, quantum, mechanical, potential, subsequently, quantum, potential,. The quantum potential or quantum potentiality is a central concept of the de Broglie Bohm formulation of quantum mechanics introduced by David Bohm in 1952 Initially presented under the name quantum mechanical potential subsequently quantum potential it was later elaborated upon by Bohm and Basil Hiley in its interpretation as an information potential which acts on a quantum particle It is also referred to as quantum potential energy Bohm potential quantum Bohm potential or Bohm quantum potential Quantum potential Q ℏ 2 2 m 2 R R displaystyle quad Q frac hbar 2 2m frac nabla 2 R R In the framework of the de Broglie Bohm theory the quantum potential is a term within the Schrodinger equation which acts to guide the movement of quantum particles The quantum potential approach introduced by Bohm 1 2 provides a physically less fundamental exposition of the idea presented by Louis de Broglie de Broglie had postulated in 1925 that the relativistic wave function defined on spacetime represents a pilot wave which guides a quantum particle represented as an oscillating peak in the wave field but he had subsequently abandoned his approach because he was unable to derive the guidance equation for the particle from a non linear wave equation The seminal articles of Bohm in 1952 introduced the quantum potential and included answers to the objections which had been raised against the pilot wave theory The Bohm quantum potential is closely linked with the results of other approaches in particular relating to work by Erwin Madelung of 1927 and to work by Carl Friedrich von Weizsacker of 1935 Building on the interpretation of the quantum theory introduced by Bohm in 1952 David Bohm and Basil Hiley in 1975 presented how the concept of a quantum potential leads to the notion of an unbroken wholeness of the entire universe proposing that the fundamental new quality introduced by quantum physics is nonlocality 3 Contents 1 Quantum potential as part of the Schrodinger equation 1 1 Continuity equation 1 2 Quantum Hamilton Jacobi equation 2 Properties 2 1 Relation to the measurement process 2 2 Quantum potential of an n particle system 2 3 Derivation for a separable quantum system 3 Formulation in terms of probability density 3 1 Quantum potential in terms of the probability density function 3 2 Quantum force 3 3 Formulation in configuration space and in momentum space as the result of projections 4 Relation to other quantities and theories 4 1 Relation to the Fisher information 4 2 Relation to the Madelung pressure tensor 4 3 Relation to the von Weizsacker correction 4 4 Quantum potential as energy of internal motion associated with spin 4 5 EP quantum mechanics with quantum potential as Schwarzian derivative 5 Re interpretation in terms of Clifford algebras 6 Relativistic and field theoretic extensions 6 1 Quantum potential and relativity 6 2 Quantum potential in quantum field theory 7 Interpretation and naming of the quantum potential 8 Applications 9 Further reading 9 1 Fundamental articles 9 2 Recent articles 9 3 Overview 10 ReferencesQuantum potential as part of the Schrodinger equation editThe Schrodinger equation i ℏ ps t ℏ 2 2 m 2 V ps displaystyle i hbar frac partial psi partial t left frac hbar 2 2m nabla 2 V right psi quad nbsp is re written using the polar form for the wave function ps R exp i S ℏ displaystyle psi R exp iS hbar nbsp with real valued functions R displaystyle R nbsp and S displaystyle S nbsp where R displaystyle R nbsp is the amplitude absolute value of the wave function ps displaystyle psi nbsp and S ℏ displaystyle S hbar nbsp its phase This yields two equations from the imaginary and real part of the Schrodinger equation follow the continuity equation and the quantum Hamilton Jacobi equation respectively 1 4 Continuity equation edit The imaginary part of the Schrodinger equation in polar form yields R t 1 2 m R 2 S 2 R S displaystyle frac partial R partial t frac 1 2m left R nabla 2 S 2 nabla R cdot nabla S right nbsp which provided r R 2 displaystyle rho R 2 nbsp can be interpreted as the continuity equation r t r v 0 displaystyle partial rho partial t nabla cdot rho v 0 nbsp for the probability density r displaystyle rho nbsp and the velocity field v 1 m S displaystyle v frac 1 m nabla S nbsp Quantum Hamilton Jacobi equation edit The real part of the Schrodinger equation in polar form yields a modified Hamilton Jacobi equation S t S 2 2 m V Q displaystyle frac partial S partial t left frac left nabla S right 2 2m V Q right nbsp also referred to as quantum Hamilton Jacobi equation 5 It differs from the classical Hamilton Jacobi equation only by the term Q ℏ 2 2 m 2 R R displaystyle Q frac hbar 2 2m frac nabla 2 R R nbsp This term Q displaystyle Q nbsp called quantum potential thus depends on the curvature of the amplitude of the wave function 6 7 In the limit ℏ 0 displaystyle hbar to 0 nbsp the function S displaystyle S nbsp is a solution of the classical Hamilton Jacobi equation 1 therefore the function S displaystyle S nbsp is also called the Hamilton Jacobi function or action extended to quantum physics Properties edit nbsp Bohm trajectories under the influence of the quantum potential at the example of an electron going through the two slit experiment Hiley emphasised several aspects 8 that regard the quantum potential of a quantum particle it is derived mathematically from the real part of the Schrodinger equation under polar decomposition of the wave function 9 is not derived from a Hamiltonian 10 or other external source and could be said to be involved in a self organising process involving a basic underlying field it does not change if R displaystyle R nbsp is multiplied by a constant as this term is also present in the denominator so that Q displaystyle Q nbsp is independent of the magnitude of ps displaystyle psi nbsp and thus of field intensity therefore the quantum potential fulfils a precondition for nonlocality it need not fall off as distance increases it carries information about the whole experimental arrangement in which the particle finds itself In 1979 Hiley and his co workers Philippidis and Dewdney presented a full calculation on the explanation of the two slit experiment in terms of Bohmian trajectories that arise for each particle moving under the influence of the quantum potential resulting in the well known interference patterns 11 nbsp Schematic of double slit experiment in which Aharonov Bohm effect can be observed electrons pass through two slits interfering at an observation screen and the interference pattern undergoes a shift when a magnetic field B is turned on in the cylindrical solenoid Also the shift of the interference pattern which occurs in presence of a magnetic field in the Aharonov Bohm effect could be explained as arising from the quantum potential 12 Relation to the measurement process edit The collapse of the wave function of the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum theory is explained in the quantum potential approach by the demonstration that after a measurement all the packets of the multi dimensional wave function that do not correspond to the actual result of measurement have no effect on the particle from then on 13 Bohm and Hiley pointed out that the quantum potential can develop unstable bifurcation points which separate classes of particle trajectories according to the channels into which they eventually enter and within which they stay This explains how measurement is possible without collapse of the wave function and how all sorts of quantum processes such as transitions between states fusion of two states into one and fission of one system into two are able to take place without the need for a human observer 14 Measurement then involves a participatory transformation in which both the system under observation and the observing apparatus undergo a mutual participation so that the trajectories behave in a correlated manner becoming correlated and separated into different non overlapping sets which we call channels 15 Quantum potential of an n particle system edit The Schrodinger wave function of a many particle quantum system cannot be represented in ordinary three dimensional space Rather it is represented in configuration space with three dimensions per particle A single point in configuration space thus represents the configuration of the entire n particle system as a whole A two particle wave function ps r 1 r 2 t displaystyle psi mathbf r 1 mathbf r 2 t nbsp of identical particles of mass m displaystyle m nbsp has the quantum potential 16 Q r 1 r 2 t ℏ 2 2 m 1 2 2 2 R r 1 r 2 t R r 1 r 2 t displaystyle Q mathbf r 1 mathbf r 2 t frac hbar 2 2m frac nabla 1 2 nabla 2 2 R mathbf r 1 mathbf r 2 t R mathbf r 1 mathbf r 2 t nbsp where 1 2 displaystyle nabla 1 2 nbsp and 2 2 displaystyle nabla 2 2 nbsp refer to particle 1 and particle 2 respectively This expression generalizes in straightforward manner to n displaystyle n nbsp particles Q r 1 r n t ℏ 2 2 R r 1 r n t i 1 n i 2 m i R r 1 r n t displaystyle Q mathbf r 1 mathbf r n t frac hbar 2 2R mathbf r 1 mathbf r n t sum i 1 n frac nabla i 2 m i R mathbf r 1 mathbf r n t nbsp In case the wave function of two or more particles is separable then the system s total quantum potential becomes the sum of the quantum potentials of the two particles Exact separability is extremely unphysical given that interactions between the system and its environment destroy the factorization however a wave function that is a superposition of several wave functions of approximately disjoint support will factorize approximately 17 Derivation for a separable quantum system edit That the wave function is separable means that ps displaystyle psi nbsp factorizes in the form ps r 1 r 2 t ps A r 1 t ps B r 2 t displaystyle psi mathbf r 1 mathbf r 2 t psi A mathbf r 1 t psi B mathbf r 2 t nbsp Then it follows that also R displaystyle R nbsp factorizes and the system s total quantum potential becomes the sum of the quantum potentials of the two particles 18 Q r 1 r 2 t ℏ 2 2 m 1 2 R A r 1 t R A r 1 t 2 2 R B r 2 t R B r 2 t Q A r 1 t Q B r 2 t displaystyle Q mathbf r 1 mathbf r 2 t frac hbar 2 2m frac nabla 1 2 R A mathbf r 1 t R A mathbf r 1 t frac nabla 2 2 R B mathbf r 2 t R B mathbf r 2 t Q A mathbf r 1 t Q B mathbf r 2 t nbsp In case the wave function is separable that is if ps displaystyle psi nbsp factorizes in the form ps r 1 r 2 t ps A r 1 t ps B r 2 t displaystyle psi mathbf r 1 mathbf r 2 t psi A mathbf r 1 t psi B mathbf r 2 t nbsp the two one particle systems behave independently More generally the quantum potential of an n displaystyle n nbsp particle system with separable wave function is the sum of n displaystyle n nbsp quantum potentials separating the system into n displaystyle n nbsp independent one particle systems 19 Formulation in terms of probability density editQuantum potential in terms of the probability density function edit Bohm as well as other physicists after him have sought to provide evidence that the Born rule linking R displaystyle R nbsp to the probability density function r R 2 displaystyle rho R 2 quad nbsp can be understood in a pilot wave formulation as not representing a basic law but rather a theorem called quantum equilibrium hypothesis which applies when a quantum equilibrium is reached during the course of the time development under the Schrodinger equation With Born s rule and straightforward application of the chain and product rules 2 r r 1 2 1 2 r 1 2 r 1 2 r 1 2 r r 1 2 2 r displaystyle nabla 2 sqrt rho nabla nabla rho 1 2 nabla left frac 1 2 rho 1 2 nabla rho right frac 1 2 left left nabla rho 1 2 right nabla rho rho 1 2 nabla 2 rho right nbsp the quantum potential expressed in terms of the probability density function becomes 20 Q ℏ 2 2 m 2 r r ℏ 2 4 m 2 r r 1 2 r 2 r 2 displaystyle Q frac hbar 2 2m frac nabla 2 sqrt rho sqrt rho frac hbar 2 4m left frac nabla 2 rho rho frac 1 2 frac nabla rho 2 rho 2 right nbsp Quantum force edit The quantum force F Q Q displaystyle F Q nabla Q nbsp expressed in terms of the probability distribution amounts to 21 F Q ℏ 2 4 m 2 r r r r 2 r 2 2 r r r r r 2 r r displaystyle F Q frac hbar 2 4m left frac nabla nabla 2 rho rho frac nabla nabla rho cdot nabla rho 2 rho 2 left frac nabla 2 rho rho frac nabla rho cdot nabla rho rho 2 right frac nabla rho rho right nbsp Formulation in configuration space and in momentum space as the result of projections edit M R Brown and B Hiley showed that as alternative to its formulation terms of configuration space x displaystyle x nbsp space the quantum potential can also be formulated in terms of momentum space p displaystyle p nbsp space 22 23 In line with David Bohm s approach Basil Hiley and mathematician Maurice de Gosson showed that the quantum potential can be seen as a consequence of a projection of an underlying structure more specifically of a non commutative algebraic structure onto a subspace such as ordinary space x displaystyle x nbsp space In algebraic terms the quantum potential can be seen as arising from the relation between implicate and explicate orders if a non commutative algebra is employed to describe the non commutative structure of the quantum formalism it turns out that it is impossible to define an underlying space but that rather shadow spaces homomorphic spaces can be constructed and that in so doing the quantum potential appears 23 24 25 26 27 The quantum potential approach can be seen as a way to construct the shadow spaces 25 The quantum potential thus results as a distortion due to the projection of the underlying space into x displaystyle x nbsp space in similar manner as a Mercator projection inevitably results in a distortion in a geographical map 28 29 There exists complete symmetry between the x displaystyle x nbsp representation and the quantum potential as it appears in configuration space can be seen as arising from the dispersion of the momentum p displaystyle p nbsp representation 30 The approach has been applied to extended phase space 30 31 also in terms of a Duffin Kemmer Petiau algebra approach 32 33 Relation to other quantities and theories editRelation to the Fisher information edit It can be shown 34 that the mean value of the quantum potential Q ℏ 2 2 r 2 m r displaystyle Q hbar 2 nabla 2 sqrt rho 2m sqrt rho nbsp is proportional to the probability density s Fisher information about the observable x displaystyle hat x nbsp I r ln r 2 d 3 x r 2 ln r d 3 x displaystyle mathcal I int rho cdot nabla ln rho 2 d 3 x int rho nabla 2 ln rho d 3 x nbsp Using this definition for the Fisher information we can write 35 Q ps Q ps d 3 x r Q d 3 x ℏ 2 8 m I displaystyle langle Q rangle int psi Q psi d 3 x int rho Q d 3 x frac hbar 2 8m mathcal I nbsp Relation to the Madelung pressure tensor edit In the Madelung equations presented by Erwin Madelung in 1927 the non local quantum pressure tensor has the same mathematical form as the quantum potential The underlying theory is different in that the Bohm approach describes particle trajectories whereas the equations of Madelung quantum hydrodynamics are the Euler equations of a fluid that describe its averaged statistical characteristics 36 Relation to the von Weizsacker correction edit In 1935 37 Carl Friedrich von Weizsacker proposed the addition of an inhomogeneity term sometimes referred to as a von Weizsacker correction to the kinetic energy of the Thomas Fermi TF theory of atoms 38 The von Weizsacker correction term is 39 E W r d r r ℏ 2 ln r 2 8 m ℏ 2 8 m d r r 2 r d r r Q displaystyle E W rho int dr frac rho hbar 2 nabla ln rho 2 8m frac hbar 2 8m int dr frac nabla rho 2 rho int dr rho Q nbsp The correction term has also been derived as the first order correction to the TF kinetic energy in a semi classical correction to the Hartree Fock theory 40 It has been pointed out 39 that the von Weizsacker correction term at low density takes on the same form as the quantum potential Main article Thomas Fermi model Inaccuracies and improvements Quantum potential as energy of internal motion associated with spin edit Giovanni Salesi Erasmo Recami and co workers showed in 1998 that in agreement with the Konig s theorem the quantum potential can be identified with the kinetic energy of the internal motion zitterbewegung associated with the spin of a spin particle observed in a center of mass frame More specifically they showed that the internal zitterbewegung velocity for a spinning non relativistic particle of constant spin with no precession and in absence of an external field has the squared value 41 V 2 r s 2 m r 2 r 2 s 2 r s 2 m r 2 displaystyle mathbf V 2 frac nabla rho land mathbf s 2 m rho 2 frac nabla rho 2 mathbf s 2 nabla rho cdot mathbf s 2 m rho 2 nbsp from which the second term is shown to be of negligible size then with s ℏ 2 displaystyle mathbf s hbar 2 nbsp it follows that V ℏ 2 r m r displaystyle mathbf V frac hbar 2 frac nabla rho m rho nbsp Salesi gave further details on this work in 2009 42 In 1999 Salvatore Esposito generalized their result from spin particles to particles of arbitrary spin confirming the interpretation of the quantum potential as a kinetic energy for an internal motion Esposito showed that using the notation ℏ displaystyle hbar nbsp 1 the quantum potential can be written as 43 Q 1 2 m v S 2 1 2 v S displaystyle Q frac 1 2 m mathbf v S 2 frac 1 2 nabla cdot mathbf v S nbsp and that the causal interpretation of quantum mechanics can be reformulated in terms of a particle velocity v v B v S s displaystyle mathbf v mathbf v B mathbf v S times mathbf s nbsp where the drift velocity is v B S m displaystyle mathbf v B frac nabla S m nbsp and the relative velocity is v S s displaystyle mathbf v S times mathbf s nbsp with v S R 2 2 m R 2 displaystyle mathbf v S frac nabla R 2 2mR 2 nbsp and s displaystyle mathbf s nbsp representing the spin direction of the particle In this formulation according to Esposito quantum mechanics must necessarily be interpreted in probabilistic terms for the reason that a system s initial motion condition cannot be exactly determined 43 Esposito explained that the quantum effects present in the Schrodinger equation are due to the presence of a peculiar spatial direction associated with the particle that assuming the isotropy of space can be identified with the spin of the particle itself 44 Esposito generalized it from matter particles to gauge particles in particular photons for which he showed that if modelled as ps E i B 2 displaystyle psi mathbf E i mathbf B sqrt 2 nbsp with probability function ps ps E 2 B 2 2 displaystyle psi cdot psi mathbf E 2 mathbf B 2 2 nbsp they can be understood in a quantum potential approach 45 James R Bogan in 2002 published the derivation of a reciprocal transformation from the Hamilton Jacobi equation of classical mechanics to the time dependent Schrodinger equation of quantum mechanics which arises from a gauge transformation representing spin under the simple requirement of conservation of probability This spin dependent transformation is a function of the quantum potential 46 EP quantum mechanics with quantum potential as Schwarzian derivative edit In a different approach the EP quantum mechanics formulated on the basis of an Equivalence Principle EP a quantum potential is written as 47 48 Q q ℏ 2 4 m S q displaystyle Q q frac hbar 2 4m S q nbsp where displaystyle cdot cdot nbsp is the Schwarzian derivative that is S q S S 3 2 S S 2 displaystyle S q S S 3 2 S S 2 nbsp However even in cases where this may equal Q q ℏ 2 2 m D R R displaystyle Q q frac hbar 2 2m frac Delta R R nbsp it is stressed by E Faraggi and M Matone that this does not correspond with the usual quantum potential as in their approach R exp i S ℏ displaystyle R exp iS hbar nbsp is a solution to the Schrodinger equation but does not correspond to the wave function 47 This has been investigated further by E R Floyd for the classical limit ℏ 0 displaystyle hbar to 0 nbsp 49 as well as by Robert Carroll 50 Re interpretation in terms of Clifford algebras editB Hiley and R E Callaghan re interpret the role of the Bohm model and its notion of quantum potential in the framework of Clifford algebra taking account of recent advances that include the work of David Hestenes on spacetime algebra They show how within a nested hierarchy of Clifford algebras C ℓ i j displaystyle C ell i j nbsp for each Clifford algebra an element of a minimal left ideal F L r t displaystyle Phi L mathbf r t nbsp and an element of a right ideal representing its Clifford conjugation F R r t F L r t displaystyle Phi R mathbf r t tilde Phi L mathbf r t nbsp can be constructed and from it the Clifford density element CDE r c r t F L r t F L r t displaystyle rho c mathbf r t Phi L mathbf r t tilde Phi L mathbf r t nbsp an element of the Clifford algebra which is isomorphic to the standard density matrix but independent of any specific representation 51 On this basis bilinear invariants can be formed which represent properties of the system Hiley and Callaghan distinguish bilinear invariants of a first kind of which each stands for the expectation value of an element B displaystyle B nbsp of the algebra which can be formed as T r B r c displaystyle rm Tr B rho c nbsp and bilinear invariants of a second kind which are constructed with derivatives and represent momentum and energy Using these terms they reconstruct the results of quantum mechanics without depending on a particular representation in terms of a wave function nor requiring reference to an external Hilbert space Consistent with earlier results the quantum potential of a non relativistic particle with spin Pauli particle is shown to have an additional spin dependent term and the momentum of a relativistic particle with spin Dirac particle is shown to consist in a linear motion and a rotational part 52 The two dynamical equations governing the time evolution are re interpreted as conservation equations One of them stands for the conservation of energy the other stands for the conservation of probability and of spin 53 The quantum potential plays the role of an internal energy 54 which ensures the conservation of total energy 53 Relativistic and field theoretic extensions editQuantum potential and relativity edit Bohm and Hiley demonstrated that the non locality of quantum theory can be understood as limit case of a purely local theory provided the transmission of active information is allowed to be greater than the speed of light and that this limit case yields approximations to both quantum theory and relativity 55 The quantum potential approach was extended by Hiley and co workers to quantum field theory in Minkowski spacetime 56 57 58 59 and to curved spacetime 60 Carlo Castro and Jorge Mahecha derived the Schrodinger equation from the Hamilton Jacobi equation in conjunction with the continuity equation and showed that the properties of the relativistic Bohm quantum potential in terms of the ensemble density can be described by the Weyl properties of space In Riemann flat space the Bohm potential is shown to equal the Weyl curvature According to Castro and Mahecha in the relativistic case the quantum potential using the d Alembert operator displaystyle scriptstyle Box nbsp and in the notation ℏ 1 displaystyle hbar 1 nbsp takes the form Q 1 2 m r r displaystyle Q frac 1 2m frac quad Box sqrt rho sqrt rho nbsp and the quantum force exerted by the relativistic quantum potential is shown to depend on the Weyl gauge potential and its derivatives Furthermore the relationship among Bohm s potential and the Weyl curvature in flat spacetime corresponds to a similar relationship among Fisher Information and Weyl geometry after introduction of a complex momentum 61 Diego L Rapoport on the other hand associates the relativistic quantum potential with the metric scalar curvature Riemann curvature 62 In relation to the Klein Gordon equation for a particle with mass and charge Peter R Holland spoke in his book of 1993 of a quantum potential like term that is proportional R R displaystyle Box R R nbsp He emphasized however that to give the Klein Gordon theory a single particle interpretation in terms of trajectories as can be done for nonrelativistic Schrodinger quantum mechanics would lead to unacceptable inconsistencies For instance wave functions ps x t displaystyle psi mathbf x t nbsp that are solutions to the Klein Gordon or the Dirac equation cannot be interpreted as the probability amplitude for a particle to be found in a given volume d 3 x displaystyle d 3 x nbsp at time t displaystyle t nbsp in accordance with the usual axioms of quantum mechanics and similarly in the causal interpretation it cannot be interpreted as the probability for the particle to be in that volume at that time Holland pointed out that while efforts have been made to determine a Hermitian position operator that would allow an interpretation of configuration space quantum field theory in particular using the Newton Wigner localization approach but that no connection with possibilities for an empirical determination of position in terms of a relativistic measurement theory or for a trajectory interpretation has so far been established Yet according to Holland this does not mean that the trajectory concept is to be discarded from considerations of relativistic quantum mechanics 63 Hrvoje Nikolic derived Q 1 2 m R R displaystyle Q 1 2m Box R R nbsp as expression for the quantum potential and he proposed a Lorentz covariant formulation of the Bohmian interpretation of many particle wave functions 64 He also developed a generalized relativistic invariant probabilistic interpretation of quantum theory 65 66 67 in which ps 2 displaystyle psi 2 nbsp is no longer a probability density in space but a probability density in space time 68 69 Quantum potential in quantum field theory edit Starting from the space representation of the field coordinate a causal interpretation of the Schrodinger picture of relativistic quantum theory has been constructed The Schrodinger picture for a neutral spin 0 massless field PS ps x t R ps x t e S ps x t displaystyle Psi left psi mathbf x t right R left psi mathbf x t right e S left psi mathbf x t right nbsp with R ps x t S ps x t displaystyle R left psi mathbf x t right S left psi mathbf x t right nbsp real valued functionals can be shown 70 to lead to Q ps x t 1 2 R d 3 x d 2 R d ps 2 displaystyle Q left psi mathbf x t right 1 2R int d 3 x delta 2 R delta psi 2 nbsp This has been called the superquantum potential by Bohm and his co workers 71 Basil Hiley showed that the energy momentum relations in the Bohm model can be obtained directly from the energy momentum tensor of quantum field theory and that the quantum potential is an energy term that is required for local energy momentum conservation 72 He has also hinted that for particle with energies equal to or higher than the pair creation threshold Bohm s model constitutes a many particle theory that describes also pair creation and annihilation processes 73 Interpretation and naming of the quantum potential editIn his article of 1952 providing an alternative interpretation of quantum mechanics Bohm already spoke of a quantum mechanical potential 74 Bohm and Basil Hiley also called the quantum potential an information potential given that it influences the form of processes and is itself shaped by the environment 10 Bohm indicated The ship or aeroplane with its automatic Pilot is a self active system i e it has its own energy But the form of its activity is determined by the information content concerning its environment that is carried by the radar waves This is independent of the intensity of the waves We can similarly regard the quantum potential as containing active information It is potentially active everywhere but actually active only where and when there is a particle italics in original 75 Hiley refers to the quantum potential as internal energy 25 and as a new quality of energy only playing a role in quantum processes 76 He explains that the quantum potential is a further energy term aside the well known kinetic energy and the classical potential energy and that it is a nonlocal energy term that arises necessarily in view of the requirement of energy conservation he added that much of the physics community s resistance against the notion of the quantum potential may have been due to scientists expectations that energy should be local 77 Hiley has emphasized that the quantum potential for Bohm was a key element in gaining insights into what could underlie the quantum formalism Bohm was convinced by his deeper analysis of this aspect of the approach that the theory could not be mechanical Rather it is organic in the sense of Whitehead Namely that it was the whole that determined the properties of the individual particles and their relationship not the other way round 78 79 Peter R Holland in his comprehensive textbook also refers to it as quantum potential energy 80 The quantum potential is also referred to in association with Bohm s name as Bohm potential quantum Bohm potential or Bohm quantum potential Applications editThe quantum potential approach can be used to model quantum effects without requiring the Schrodinger equation to be explicitly solved and it can be integrated in simulations such as Monte Carlo simulations using the hydrodynamic and drift diffusion equations 81 This is done in form of a hydrodynamic calculation of trajectories starting from the density at each fluid element the acceleration of each fluid element is computed from the gradient of V displaystyle V nbsp and Q displaystyle Q nbsp and the resulting divergence of the velocity field determines the change to the density 82 The approach using Bohmian trajectories and the quantum potential is used for calculating properties of quantum systems which cannot be solved exactly which are often approximated using semi classical approaches Whereas in mean field approaches the potential for the classical motion results from an average over wave functions this approach does not require the computation of an integral over wave functions 83 The expression for the quantum force has been used together with Bayesian statistical analysis and Expectation maximisation methods for computing ensembles of trajectories that arise under the influence of classical and quantum forces 21 Further reading editFundamental articles edit Bohm David 1952 A Suggested Interpretation of the Quantum Theory in Terms of Hidden Variables I Physical Review 85 2 166 179 Bibcode 1952PhRv 85 166B doi 10 1103 PhysRev 85 166 full text Bohm David 1952 A Suggested Interpretation of the Quantum Theory in Terms of Hidden Variables II Physical Review 85 2 180 193 Bibcode 1952PhRv 85 180B doi 10 1103 PhysRev 85 180 full text D Bohm B J Hiley P N Kaloyerou An ontological basis for the quantum theory Physics Reports Review section of Physics Letters volume 144 number 6 pp 321 375 1987 full text Archived 2012 03 19 at the Wayback Machine therein D Bohm B J Hiley I Non relativistic particle systems pp 321 348 and D Bohm B J Hiley P N Kaloyerou II A causal interpretation of quantum fields pp 349 375 Recent articles edit Spontaneous creation of the universe from nothing arXiv 1404 1207v1 4 April 2014 Maurice de Gosson Basil Hiley Short Time Quantum Propagator and Bohmian Trajectories arXiv 1304 4771v1 submitted 17 April 2013 Robert Carroll Fluctuations gravity and the quantum potential 13 January 2005 asXiv gr qc 0501045v1 Overview edit Davide Fiscaletti About the Different Approaches to Bohm s Quantum Potential in Non Relativistic Quantum Mechanics Quantum Matter Volume 3 Number 3 June 2014 pp 177 199 23 doi 10 1166 qm 2014 1113 Ignazio Licata Davide Fiscaletti with a foreword by B J Hiley Quantum potential Physics Geometry and Algebra AMC Springer 2013 ISBN 978 3 319 00332 0 print ISBN 978 3 319 00333 7 online Peter R Holland The Quantum Theory of Motion An Account of the De Broglie Bohm Causal Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics Cambridge University Press Cambridge first published June 25 1993 ISBN 0 521 35404 8 hardback ISBN 0 521 48543 6 paperback transferred to digital printing 2004 David Bohm Basil Hiley The Undivided Universe An Ontological Interpretation of Quantum Theory Routledge 1993 ISBN 0 415 06588 7 David Bohm F David Peat Science Order and Creativity 1987 Routledge 2nd ed 2000 transferred to digital printing 2008 Routledge ISBN 0 415 17182 2References edit a b c Bohm David 1952 A Suggested Interpretation of the Quantum Theory in Terms of Hidden Variables I Physical Review 85 2 166 179 Bibcode 1952PhRv 85 166B doi 10 1103 PhysRev 85 166 full text Archived 2012 10 18 at the Wayback Machine Bohm David 1952 A Suggested Interpretation of the Quantum Theory in Terms of Hidden Variables II Physical Review 85 2 180 193 Bibcode 1952PhRv 85 180B doi 10 1103 PhysRev 85 180 full text Archived 2012 10 18 at the Wayback Machine D Bohm B J Hiley On the intuitive understanding of nonlocality as implied by quantum theory Foundations of Physics Volume 5 Number 1 pp 93 109 1975 doi 10 1007 BF01100319 abstract David Bohm Basil Hiley The Undivided Universe An Ontological Interpretation of Quantum Theory Routledge 1993 ISBN 0 415 06588 7 therein Chapter 3 1 The main points of the causal interpretation p 22 23 David Bohm Basil Hiley The Undivided Universe An Ontological Interpretation of Quantum Theory Routledge 1993 ISBN 0 415 06588 7 also as cited in B J Hiley and R E Callaghan Clifford Algebras and the Dirac Bohm Quantum Hamilton Jacobi Equation Foundations of Physics January 2012 Volume 42 Issue 1 pp 192 208 published online 20 May 2011 doi 10 1007 s10701 011 9558 z abstract 2010 preprint by B Hiley See for ex Robert E Wyatt Eric R Bittner Quantum wave packet dynamics with trajectories Implementation with adaptive Lagrangian grids of the amplitude of the wave function Journal of Chemical Physics vol 113 no 20 22 November 2000 p 8898 Archived 2011 10 02 at the Wayback Machine See also Pilot wave Mathematical formulation for a single particle B J Hiley Active Information and Teleportation p 7 appeared in Epistemological and Experimental Perspectives on Quantum Physics D Greenberger et al eds pages 113 126 Kluwer Netherlands 1999 B J Hiley From the Heisenberg picture to Bohm A New Perspective on Active Information and it Relation to Shannon Information pp 2 and 5 Published in A Khrennikov ed Proc Conf Quantum Theory reconsideration of foundations pp 141 162 Vaxjo University Press Sweden 2002 a b B J Hiley Information quantum theory and the brain In Gordon G Globus ed Karl H Pribram ed Giuseppe Vitiello ed Brain and being at the boundary between science philosophy language and arts Advances in Consciousness Research John Benjamins B V 2004 ISBN 90 272 5194 0 pp 197 214 p 207 C Philippidis C Dewdney B J Hiley Quantum interference and the quantum potential Il nuovo cimento B vol 52 no 1 1979 pp 15 28 doi 10 1007 BF02743566 C Philippidis D Bohm R D Kaye The Aharonov Bohm effect and the quantum potential Il nuovo cimento B vol 71 no 1 pp 75 88 1982 doi 10 1007 BF02721695 Basil J Hiley The role of the quantum potential In G Tarozzi Alwyn Van der Merwe Open questions in quantum physics invited papers on the foundations of microphysics Springer 1985 pages 237 ff therein page 239 D Bohm B J Hiley P N Kaloyerou An ontological basis for the quantum theory Physics Reports Review section of Physics Letters volume 144 number 6 pp 323 348 1987 abstract Archived 2012 03 19 at the Wayback Machine B J Hiley The conceptual structure of the Bohm interpretation of quantum mechanics In K V Laurikainen fi C Montonen K Sunnarborg eds Symposium on the Foundations of Modern Physics 1994 70 years of Matter Waves Editions Frontieres pp 99 118 ISBN 2 86332 169 2 p 106 B J Hiley Active Information and Teleportation p 10 appeared in Epistemological and Experimental Perspectives on Quantum Physics D Greenberger et al eds pages 113 126 Kluwer Netherlands 1999 See for instance Detlef Durr et al Quantum equilibrium and the origin of absolute uncertainty arXiv quant ph 0308039v1 6 August 2003 p 23 ff David Bohm Basil Hiley The Undivided Universe An Ontological Interpretation of Quantum Theory Routledge 1993 ISBN 0 415 06588 7 transferred to digital printing 2005 therein Chapter 4 1 The ontological interpretation of the many body system p 59 D Bohm B J Hiley P N Kaloyerou An ontological basis for the quantum theory Physics Reports Review section of Physics Letters volume 144 number 6 pp 323 348 1987 p 351 eq 12 Archived 2012 03 19 at the Wayback Machine lt page 31 p 351 is not a typo gt See for example the Introduction section of Fernando Ogiba Phenomenological derivation of the Schrodinger equation Archived 2011 10 11 at the Wayback Machine Progress in Physics indicated date October 2011 but retrieved online earlier July 31 2011 a b Jeremy B Maddox Eric R Bittner Estimating Bohm s quantum force using Bayesian statistics Archived 2011 11 20 at the Wayback Machine Journal of Chemical Physics October 2003 vol 119 no 13 p 6465 6474 therein p 6472 eq 38 M R Brown The quantum potential the breakdown of classical symplectic symmetry and the energy of localisation and dispersion arXiv org submitted on 6 Mar 1997 version of 5 Feb 2002 retrieved 24 July 2011 abstract a b M R Brown B J Hiley Schrodinger revisited an algebraic approach arXiv org submitted 4 May 2000 version of 19 July 2004 retrieved June 3 2011 abstract Maurice A de Gosson The Principles of Newtonian and Quantum Mechanics The Need for Planck s Constant h Imperial College Press World Scientific Publishing 2001 ISBN 1 86094 274 1 a b c B J Hiley Non commutative quantum geometry A reappraisal of the Bohm approach to quantum theory in A Elitzur et al eds Quo vadis quantum mechanics Springer 2005 ISBN 3 540 22188 3 p 299 324 B J Hiley Non Commutative Quantum Geometry A Reappraisal of the Bohm Approach to Quantum Theory In Avshalom C Elitzur Shahar Dolev Nancy Kolenda eds Quo Vadis Quantum Mechanics The Frontiers Collection 2005 pp 299 324 doi 10 1007 3 540 26669 0 16 abstract preprint B J Hiley Phase space description of quantum mechanics and non commutative geometry Wigner Moyal and Bohm in a wider context In Theo M Nieuwenhuizen et al eds Beyond the quantum World Scientific Publishing 2007 ISBN 978 981 277 117 9 pp 203 211 therein p 204 Basil J Hiley Towards a Dynamics of Moments The Role of Algebraic Deformation and Inequivalent Vacuum States published in Correlations ed K G Bowden Proc ANPA 23 104 134 2001 PDF B J Hiley R E Callaghan The Clifford Algebra approach to Quantum Mechanics A The Schroedinger and Pauli Particles arXiv org submitted on 17 Nov 2010 abstract a b B Hiley Phase space description of quantum mechanics and non commutative geometry Wigner Moyal and Bohm in a wider context in Th M Nieuwenhuizen et al eds Beyond the Quantum World Scientific 2007 ISBN 978 981 277 117 9 p 203 211 therein p 207 ff S Nasiri Quantum potential and symmetries in extended phase space SIGMA 2 2006 062 quant ph 0511125 Marco Cezar B Fernandes J David M Vianna On the Generalized Phase Space Approach to Duffin Kemmer Petiau Particles Brazilian Journal of Physics vol 28 no 4 December 1998 doi 10 1590 S0103 97331998000400024 M C B Fernandes J D M Vianna On the Duffin Kemmer Petiau algebra and the generalized phase space Foundations of Physics vol 29 no 2 1999 abstract M Reginatto Phys Rev A 58 1775 1998 cited after Roumen Tsekov Towards nonlinear quantum Fokker Planck equations Int J Theor Phys 48 2009 1431 1435 arXiv 0808 0326 p 4 Robert Carroll On the Emergence Theme of Physics World Scientific 2010 ISBN 981 4291 79 X Chapter 1 Some quantum background p 1 Tsekov R 2012 Bohmian Mechanics versus Madelung Quantum Hydrodynamics doi 10 13140 RG 2 1 3663 8245 C F von Weizsacker Zur Theorie der Kernmassen Zeitschrift fur Physik Volume 96 pp 431 458 1935 See also section Introduction of Rafael Benguria Haim Brezis Elliott H Lieb The Thomas Fermi von Weizsacker theory of atoms and molecules Commun Math Phys Volume 79 pp 167 180 1981 doi 10 1007 BF01942059 a b See also Roumen Tsekov Dissipative time dependent density functional theory Int J Theor Phys Vol 48 pp 2660 2664 2009 arXiv 0903 3644 Kompaneets Alexander Solomonovich Pavlovskii E S Sov Phys JETP volume 4 pp 328 336 1957 Cited in section Introduction of Rafael Benguria Haim Brezis Elliott H Lieb The Thomas Fermi von Weizsacker theory of atoms and molecules Commun Math Phys volume 79 pp 167 180 1981 doi 10 1007 BF01942059 G Salesi E Recami H E Hernandez F Luis C Kretly Hydrodynamics of spinning particles submitted 15 February 1998 arXiv org arXiv hep th 9802106v1 G Salesi Spin and Madelung fluid submitted 23 June 2009 arXiv quant ph 0906 4147v1 a b Salvatore Esposito On the role of spin in quantum mechanics submitted 5 February 1999 arXiv quant ph 9902019v1 p 7 S Esposito Photon wave mechanics A de Broglie Bohm approach p 8 ff James R Bogan Spin The classical to quantum connection arXiv org submitted 19 December 2002 arXiv quant ph 0212110 a b Alon E Faraggi M Matone The Equivalence Postulate of Quantum Mechanics International Journal of Modern Physics A vol 15 no 13 pp 1869 2017 arXiv hep th 9809127 of 6 August 1999 Robert Carroll Aspects of quantum groups and integrable systems Proceedings of Institute of Mathematics of NAS of Ukraine vo 50 part 1 2004 pp 356 367 p 357 Edward R Floyd Classical limit of the trajectory representation of quantum mechanics loss of information and residual indeterminacy arXiv quant ph 9907092v3 R Carroll Some remarks on time uncertainty and spin arXiv quant ph 9903081v1 B Hiley R E Callaghan The Clifford algebra approach to quantum mechanics A The Schrodinger and Pauli particles 14 March 2010 p 6 B Hiley R E Callaghan The Clifford algebra approach to quantum mechanics A The Schrodinger and Pauli particles 14 March 2010 p 1 29 a b B Hiley Clifford algebras and the Dirac Bohm Hamilton Jacobi equation 2 March 2010 p 22 B J Hiley Non commutative geometry the Bohm interpretation and the mind matter relationship p 14 D Bohm B J Hiley Non locality and locality in the stochastic interpretation of quantum mechanics Physics Reports Volume 172 Issue 3 January 1989 Pages 93 122 doi 10 1016 0370 1573 89 90160 9 abstract P N Kaloyerou Investigation of the Quantum Potential in the Relativistic Domain PhD Thesis Birkbeck College London 1985 P N Kaloyerou Phys Rep 244 288 1994 P N Kaloyerou in Bohmian Mechanics and Quantum Theory An Appraisal eds J T Cushing A Fine and S Goldstein Kluwer Dordrecht 155 1996 D Bohm B J Hiley P N Kaloyerou An ontological basis for the quantum theory Physics Reports Review section of Physics Letters volume 144 number 6 pp 323 348 1987 PDF Archived 2012 03 19 at the Wayback Machine B J Hiley A H Aziz Muft The ontological interpretation of quantum field theory applied in a cosmological context In Miguel Ferrero Alwyn Van der Merwe eds Fundamental problems in quantum physics Fundamental theories of physics Kluwer Academic Publishers 1995 ISBN 0 7923 3670 4 pages 141 156 Carlo Castro Jorge Mahecha On nonlinear quantum mechanics Brownian motion Weyl geometry and Fisher information submitted February 2005 In F Smarandache and V Christianto Eds Quantization in Astrophysics Brownian Motion and Supersymmetry pp 73 87 MathTiger 2007 Chennai Tamil Nadu ISBN 81 902190 9 X page 82 eq 37 ff Rapoport Diego L 2007 Torsion fields Cartan Weyl space time and state space quantum geometries Brownian motion and their topological dimension In Smarandache F Christianto V eds Quantization in Astrophysics Brownian Motion and Supersymmetry Chennai Tamil Nadu MathTiger pp 276 328 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 75 6580 ISBN 978 81 902190 9 9 Peter R Holland The quantum theory of motion Cambridge University Press 1993 re printed 2000 transferred to digital printing 2004 ISBN 0 521 48543 6 p 498 ff Hrvoje Nikolic Relativistic Quantum Mechanics and the Bohmian Interpretation Foundations of Physics Letters vol 18 no 6 November 2005 pp 549 561 doi 10 1007 s10702 005 1128 1 Hrvoje Nikolic Time in relativistic and nonrelativistic quantum mechanics arXiv 0811 0811 1905 submitted 12 November 2008 v1 revised 12 Jan 2009 Nikolic H 2010 QFT as pilot wave theory of particle creation and destruction Int J Mod Phys A 25 1477 2010 Hrvoje Nikolic Making nonlocal reality compatible with relativity arXiv 1002 3226v2 quant ph submitted on 17 Feb 2010 version of 31 May 2010 Hrvoje Nikolic Bohmian mechanics in relativistic quantum mechanics quantum field theory and string theory 2007 J Phys Conf Ser 67 012035 See also De Broglie Bohm theory Relativity Peter R Holland The quantum theory of motion Cambridge University Press 1993 re printed 2000 transferred to digital printing 2004 ISBN 0 521 48543 6 p 520 ff Basil Hiley The conceptual structure of the Bohm interpretation of quantum mechanics Kalervo Vihtori Laurikainen et al ed Symposium on the Foundations of Modern Physics 1994 70 years of matter waves Editions Frontieres ISBN 2 86332 169 2 p 99 117 p 144 B J Hiley The Bohm approach re assessed 2010 preprint p 6 B J Hiley 2013 03 25 Bohmian Non commutative Dynamics History and New Developments Pre print arXiv 1303 6057 submitted 25 March 2013 Bohm David 1952 A Suggested Interpretation of the Quantum Theory in Terms of Hidden Variables I Physical Review 85 2 166 179 Bibcode 1952PhRv 85 166B doi 10 1103 PhysRev 85 166 p 170 Archived 2012 10 18 at the Wayback Machine David Bohm Meaning And Information Archived 2011 10 09 at archive today In P Pylkkanen ed The Search for Meaning The New Spirit in Science and Philosophy Crucible The Aquarian Press 1989 ISBN 978 1 85274 061 0 B J Hiley Non commutative quantum geometry A reappraisal of the Bohm approach to quantum theory In Avshalom C Elitzur Shahar Dolev Nancy Kolenda es Quo vadis quantum mechanics Springer 2005 ISBN 3 540 22188 3 pp 299 ff therein p 310 Basil Hiley amp Taher Gozel episode 5 YouTube downloaded 8 September 2013 B J Hiley Some remarks on the evolution of Bohm s proposals for an alternative to quantum mechanics 30 January 2010 See also Basil Hiley Quantum potential and active information Peter R Holland The quantum theory of motion Cambridge University Press 1993 re printed 2000 transferred to digital printing 2004 ISBN 0 521 48543 6 p 72 G Iannaccone G Curatola G Fiori Effective Bohm Quantum Potential for device simulators based on drift diffusion and energy transport Simulation of Semiconductor Processes and Devices 2004 vol 2004 pp 275 278 Eric R Bittner Quantum tunneling dynamics using hydrodynamic trajectories arXiv quant ph 0001119v2 18 February 2000 p 3 E Gindensberger C Meier J A Beswick Mixing quantum and classical dynamics using Bohmian trajectories Archived 2012 03 28 at the Wayback Machine Journal of Chemical Physics vol 113 no 21 1 December 2000 pp 9369 9372 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Quantum potential amp oldid 1221746903, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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