Sunday, July 27, 2008

The Schrodinger's Cat






To all the known friends, the unknown friends and the yet to be known as friends out there. I just wanna say sorry for not being able to join the fun of blogging and the friendly spirit as well as the warm atmosphere of our small own circle of bloggers (in term of reading and commenting each others’ entries).
I’ve learned from Cakapaje (upon calling him a few days earlier and reading through his blog a while ago) that our fellow bloggers, Raden Galoh and Muha Aziz are having to undergo some medical treatment of some kind. It is therefore my sincere hope that they will be recovering real soon. With that, goes my prayers to Him that He shall bestow them both the speedy recovery needed and eventual good health.



And now the entry:

"The Dancing of Wu Li Masters" (in my last entry) refers to a book written by one Gary Zukav which attemps to explain Quantum Mechanics/Physics to the laymen and those who have no scientific background. (Gary himself is not a physicist but rather a writer on biblical subjects.)
Wu Li, in his book, suggests “patterns of organic energy” (as how physics is called Taiwan). In the introductory chapter, the author explained further that “wu” can either means “matter” or “energy” and “li” is a poetic word. Thus, “like a Wu Li master who would teach us wonder for the falling petal before speaking about gravity…”
Of course, this book is one of the many books I’ve read on discussions on the beauty of Quantum Physics (not textbooks on this discipline though.) It is my long personal journey in seeking the beauty of how God created the Universe and created/creates everything else from an entirely different perspective (which is supposedly to be explainable but in the end, even the field of Quantum Physics at its best surrenders to the unexplainable phenomena.)
Indeed, “God don’t play dice” as Einstein put it. One such unexplainable phenomena which challenges the very foundation of this science as represented by the Copenhagen Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics is put put forward by an Austrian/German physicit, Erwin Shrodinger.
In this entry, I would like to share this strange phenomena (which governs our existence) with my fellow friends. For this purpose and for ease of understanding, I shall now reproduce a writing on this subject by Dilip D’Souza of India:

***

WHO is Schrodinger's cat? Arguably the world's most famous purely hypothetical feline. Never lived, but some say he's both dead and alive. At the same time. Ask your nearest physicist.

Erwin Schrodinger was a Nobel winning German physicist who died in 1961. The cat was part of a thought experiment he devised to explain one of the fundamental ideas of modern physics: Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle.

Shorn of jargon, the Uncertainty Principle says something very simple: the act of measuring something changes the result of that measurement. Heisenberg showed that simultaneously determining both the position of an electron and the speed at which it is moving is impossible. If you can measure its speed accurately, that measurement will itself make its location wildly uncertain. And vice versa.

Put another way, measurement decides the state of the electron.

This is not such an esoteric idea. Examples abound, and not just among electrons. Imagine an anthropologist visiting a remote tribal village to study its inhabitants. His very presence disturbs the villagers, who will behave differently with this stranger in their midst. So by simply observing, the anthropologist affects what he wants to observe; and thus can never hope to get a true picture of life there.

This is all very well with tiny particles nobody can see anyway, and maybe also with distant tribals. But what about everyday objects around us? What about, say, cats?

Well, that very question occured to Schrodinger. His famous thought experiment goes something like this. Let's say we have a sealed box with a cat in it. Also in the box is a device that can randomly emit marbles. In the course of a minute, the chances are exactly 50-50 that it emits one. If it does, the marble breaks a vial and releases a poisonous gas into the box. Kitty is instantly asphyxiated. Otherwise, nothing happens.

We put the box somewhere far away, where we have no way to tell what's going on inside it. Suppose we turn on the device for exactly one minute. Question: what happens to the cat?

It must seem like a trivial question. The answer is that we don't know. We cannot predict whether a marble was actually emitted. So we don't know if the cat is alive or dead.

But if we walk up to the box and open it to hear -- let's hope -- the loud miaow of a very puzzled cat, only then do we actually know that it has survived its uncertain ordeal.

Before then, the best we can say about the cat is the non-sequitur that it is either alive or dead. But that's not really such a non-sequitur. It is entirely consistent with the laws of physics to think of the cat, before we open its box, as being both alive and dead, with a probability of 50 per cent for each state. Here's the point of the experiment: our act of opening the box and observing the cat -- taking a measurement, in other words -- is what puts the cat definitely into one of those states.

Cat, alive.

So what's the point, you want to know. What's so earth-shaking about this cat shut in a box?

There are many points, actually: the effect of measurement, the idea of uncertainty, the fact of indeterminacy (of that, perhaps another time). But probably the deepest and yet simplest point is this interesting view of the world: reality takes shape only when, precisely when, we sense it. Until then, it's uncertain. That's the Principle.

The anthropologist gets a picture of tribal behaviour only when he actually observes them, even if that changes the way they behave. We really know the fate of that poor cat only when we open Schrodinger's box.

All of us have wondered on these lines. Is my image in a mirror really there if I cannot see the mirror -- if I've turned my back to it, for example? Does a tree falling in a forest make a sound, if nobody is there to hear it?

Is there reality without observation, existence without consciousness?

Schrodinger's cat showed that the laws of physics might answer that last question with "no". That may be too extreme a view for most people's tastes, people who believe reality surrounds them without needing to be looked at. Then again, Schrodinger's cat wasn't real himself.

8 comments:

cakapaje said...

Salam shirzad,

Whoa! Deep bro, real deep. Don't know whether my mind is able to grasp any of it. But you do have to excuse me as I am in turmoil...er, have been for a long while, actually :)

With regards to the Schrodinger's Cat and theory, hmmm...why can't he have picked a more simpler experimet like letting the cat dangle in midair and dropping him to see whether he does truly land on all 4 feet like cats are supposed to? That, would have been more easier I tink. Er...especially to my simple mind lah!

Anyway, I see a link here - somewhere lah - between TSC and who's the guy who wrote 'The Truth About Life In This World!'...shoot! I can't remember his name - a prominent Turkish writer and scientist and perhaps, Sufi. Well, I see the link there like seeing the glitter of stars above - you see them, but you can't make out what you see. So I think I better shut up!

Good to have you back bro :)

Ydiana said...

Hi Shirzad

Intersting perception. This Wu Li concept may have some truth in terms of energy, and the molecules. Some concept called it vibrations that travels from a place to another destination. It may even create telepathy from one to another, or it may get you what you wish for. Its like our 'doa'.

Now, this Schrodinger's Cat theory. In my opinion, this theory centers around an opinion that the world circles around you. Like, if you don't do anything, nothing will happen. What you don't know, might not exist.

Like the study of the tribal villagers, of course they will behave differently when a stranger suddenly enters their sanctuary. But if they were being observed discreetly from far, I feel that they will go on as they shoud be.

Uncertain, yes, but things still happens. When you turned your back to the mirror, you don't see yourself, but another person next to you can see your backside. If a tree fell down in the forest, we may not hear it, but it may still have fallen and the animals in there witnessed it. Some might even get hurt or killed in the process.

Correct me if I'm wrong, but in Islam we called this Qada and Qadar.

.........................

p/s My apology on the comments on your last entry... :)

And to our friend Shah..what do you mean by 'revealation'?

Shirzad Lifeboat said...

heya brother shah and salam

"bottomlessly deep..." as the rig veda describes it. but schrodinger loved cats and saw those kitties as molecules moving in space. in the hand of t. lobsang rampa, the so-called buddhist monk who claimed to have chatted with his own reincarnation self, that cat would have been hurled into the air do determine how does the power of the mind affect the gravitational force acting on the poor kitty.
anyway. yeah turkish bath is nice i think. change the fate of a man. contrary to what khalil gibran said: a man cant alter his fate, like the stars cant alter their orbits.
my mind is even simple brother.

Shirzad Lifeboat said...

hello ydiana

thanks for all the comments. no apology needed. one is free to express ones view on anything. :)
schrodinger's thought experiment was a very abstract one. this guy should have been a painter like willem dekooning instead of a physicist. yeah i like the village and the mirror anologies. just that if he had lived long enough, schrodinger would have wrapped his cat with a bandage to make it "an invisible cat" (like h g wells' invisible man). this is because later paul dirac who discovered the equation on the spin of an electron about an atom also discovered that electrons r just empty spaces.
and since we r made of atoms and electrons, we r really empty spaces. if u believe this, u can look in the mirror next time and discover how ur image isnt there anymore.
hehehe

Snowflake said...

Assallamualaikum
You make me go to your blog EVERYDAY. Now you make me search for WEBSTER just to look for
esshphysheeaated and seiquiituur.
Do not know how to react or response to your entry, but please tell me a story about your cat, and no Schrodinger's cat. (Please pardon me?)
Kitty is instantly asphyxiated.
But that's not really such a non-sequitur.
I ciplaked lagi gambar tu.

Shirzad Lifeboat said...

hello snowflake

i love cats. so when i bought a book entitled 'in search of schrodinger's cat' (by john gribbin) a long time ago, i thought i would be reading about a cat just like the cheshire cat (lewis caroll's alice in wonderland). well...it didnt turn out that way though. but there are two quotations at the beginning of the the book. one is from john lennon - "nothing is real". the other one is from erwin shrodinger himself - "i dont like it, and im sorry i ever had anything to do with it."
and as for my cat, he had been caged for nearly a month now with a collar around his neck. he got into a fight about 4 weeks ago with a serious wound that looked like a gangrene. brought him to see a vet twice. he is almost ok now.

Snowflake said...

Assallamualaikum
Ahh.. I hope "your cat" will get well soon. It is so nice to hear about your cat now. Honestly, if I have not heard of my cat meowing for at least half an hour, I will be very restless and will start calling them instead. Now I am being the cat, meowing here and there. But I am sure you do not caged your cat all day long do you?
(Sorry yeah, terkeluar topic nampaknya).
Please put more entry, because I want to learn your way of writing. (Keluar topic lagi!!!!)
Wassallam

LifeJacket said...

Salam bro,

I totally dig this entry. Schrodinger is absolutely right. Now why don't I think of it sooner.. Yupe, shouldn't have bought the mirror. The ostriches must have read Schrodinger too.