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Many-worlds Interpretation

ma1ic3

Critical Thinker
Joined
Mar 13, 2005
Messages
337
Interesting article about quantum computing that mentions the many-worlds interpretation. I've never heard of this before. What would the Copenhagen interpretation be?

From: http://www.newscientist.com/channel...voices-special-at-play-in-the-multiverse.html

"Say we decide to factorise a 10,000-digit integer, the product of two very large primes. That number cannot be expressed as a product of factors by any conceivable classical computer. Even if you took all the matter in the observable universe and turned it into a computer and then ran that computer for the age of the universe, it wouldn't come close to scratching the surface of factorising that number. But a quantum computer could factorise that easily in seconds or minutes. How can that happen?

Anyone who isn't a solipsist has to say the answer was produced by some physical process. We know there isn't enough computing power in this universe to obtain the answer, so something more is going on than what we can directly see. At that point, logically, we have already accepted the many-worlds structure. The way the quantum computer works is: the universe differentiates itself into multiple universes and each one performs a different sub-computation. The number of sub-computations is vastly more than the number of atoms in the visible universe. Then they pool their results to get the answer. Anyone who denies the existence of parallel universes has to explain how the factorisation process works."
 
i would explain the many world interpretation - but i've already done it in another universe, and i don't want to repeat myself :D
 
Interesting article about quantum computing that mentions the many-worlds interpretation.
Let's wait until they actually figure out a way to construct a "quantum computer" before we go hypothesizing on what we can infer from them.

AFAIK, there is no way, even in principle, to construct such a beast, let alone be able to get some kind of working input-output with it. Mr. Deutsch would probably qualify for the JREF's $million if he could actually produce such a device.

Castles in the sky....

-Squish
 
Let's wait until they actually figure out a way to construct a "quantum computer" before we go hypothesizing on what we can infer from them.

AFAIK, there is no way, even in principle, to construct such a beast, let alone be able to get some kind of working input-output with it. Mr. Deutsch would probably qualify for the JREF's $million if he could actually produce such a device.
How do you call the device that IBM used to factor the number 15 using a quantum algorithm?
 
How do you call the device that IBM used to factor the number 15 using a quantum algorithm?
Sorry, I should have clarified that I was refering to a quantum computer that could do anything practical. 7 qbits is a hell of a long way from the computational power necessary to do a prime factorization of a 10,000 digit number.

-Squish
 
Sorry, I should have clarified that I was refering to a quantum computer that could do anything practical. 7 qbits is a hell of a long way from the computational power necessary to do a prime factorization of a 10,000 digit number.
Then we are in agreement. Short of an overwhelming scientific breakthrough, I don't expect to see one built in my life (quite like fusion power).

But the only million dollars for which it would qualify would be those from the Nobel committee.
 
Sorry, I should have clarified that I was refering to a quantum computer that could do anything practical. 7 qbits is a hell of a long way from the computational power necessary to do a prime factorization of a 10,000 digit number.

-Squish

Then we are in agreement. Short of an overwhelming scientific breakthrough, I don't expect to see one built in my life (quite like fusion power).

You may be wrong about how long it will be before a useful quantum computer is built. Quantum encryption - both key and actual data - are a reality today; it's conceivable that a quantum processor (albeit a highly-specialized one!) may exist within a decade or two. I know for a fact that Intel and IBM are pursuing this in a non-pure-research fashion. :)

Time will tell.
 
You may be wrong about how long it will be before a useful quantum computer is built.
Yes, the time frame is likely never

The computational power of a quantum CPU, assuming one could be constructed, would be negated by decoherence caused by the input/output interface. Enormous amounts of qbits must be used for error correction.

From Wikipedia:
For [prime factoring] a 1000 bit number, this implies a need for 10^12 to 10^18 qubits. Fabrication and control of this large number of qubits is non-trivial for any of the proposed designs.

The devil is in the details.

-Squish
 
The article seems to be assuming our universe isn't infinite for its computing example.
 
Interesting article about quantum computing that mentions the many-worlds interpretation. I've never heard of this before. What would the Copenhagen interpretation be?

The short version is that Copenhagen will always either repeat the final physical predictions of the much-expanded many-worlds interpretation that is decoherence theory or else it's screwing something up. The reason is that many-worlds and the later decoherence work follow quantum mechanics to the letter while Copenhagen tries to avoid that and ends in paradoxes. However, nobody needs to take any "worlds" of many-worlds other than our own as being real and wiser physicists don't do that. It could come back to bite people like Deutsch if an addition to the theory showed only one possible "world" becomes real.
 
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The article seems to be assuming our universe isn't infinite for its computing example.
The article is assuming that the amount of matter in the universe isn't infinite.

This view is shared by most physicists and cosmologists.

-Squish
 
The article is assuming that the amount of matter in the universe isn't infinite.

That's what I meant.

This view is shared by most physicists and cosmologists.

Last I was here, there was an argument about this. I think the view on this has changed in the last few years, actually.
 
Last I was here, there was an argument about this. I think the view on this has changed in the last few years, actually.

I think they are referring to the amount of matter that was used for the Dark Matter/Dark Energy calculations. Effectively the amount of observable matter in the observable universe.
 
I'm no expert on quantum computers but I'm pretty sure it's incorrect to say they rely on the many worlds hypothesis. AFAIK they work by exploiting the state potentiality of bits of information, and one of the possible explanations for how this works is the many worlds hypothesis. The other plausible explanation is the waveform collapse scenario, which essentially says that nothing exists in a definite form unless witnessed by a conscious observer.

Correct me if I'm wrong; as I say quantum computers aren't my strong point and it's too late to Google :)
 
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The short version is that Copenhagen will always either repeat the final physical predictions of the much-expanded many-worlds interpretation that is decoherence theory or else it's screwing something up. The reason is that many-worlds and the later decoherence work follow quantum mechanics to the letter while Copenhagen tries to avoid that and ends in paradoxes. However, nobody needs to take any "worlds" of many-worlds other than our own as being real and wiser physicists don't do that. It could come back to bite people like Deutsch if an addition to the theory showed only one possible "world" becomes real.

http://www.hedweb.com/manworld.htm#believes

This strongly suggests that "wiser physicists" do not include people like Hawking and Feynman.

Anyways the long and short of it is that, to the extent that quantum mechanics accurately describes the observer as well as the observed, many worlds is true. Even if a future theory replaces quantum mechanics, that statement will be true. Either you postulate that quantum mechanics breaks down before describing large complex systems like human beings, or else the many worlds hypothesis provides an accurate explanation of why we observe a "collapse".

Cheers,
Ben
 
Anyone who isn't a solipsist has to say the answer was produced by some physical process.

Yes.

We know there isn't enough computing power in this universe to obtain the answer, so something more is going on than what we can directly see.

Wrong. We know that classical algorithms cannot compute the answer with the resources available in the universe. But quantum computers do not use classical algorithms, and the limits of classical algorithms need not (and do not) apply.

At that point, logically, we have already accepted the many-worlds structure.

Maybe this guy has, but there is absolutely no requirement that the rest of us do so.

The way the quantum computer works is: the universe differentiates itself into multiple universes and each one performs a different sub-computation.

That's only if you accept the multiple-universe assumption. Alternatively, the quantum computer is initialized with a wave function which is in a superposition state, and so just like a violin vibrates at multiple frequencies, each component of the superposition will evolve in time on its own, allowing multiple simultaneous calculations using the same resources.

Then they pool their results to get the answer. Anyone who denies the existence of parallel universes has to explain how the factorisation process works."

Uh, NO. The whole point about the various "interpretations" of quantum mechanics is that the theory itself does not differentiate between them. If quantum computers offered a way to differentiate between them, then that would mean that quantum computation added some fundamentally new physics, and it would be at the absolute CENTER of modern physics, rather than just one more specialty among so many. This guy has far too inflated an opinion of his own work.
 

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