Papers
Topics
Authors
Recent
2000 character limit reached

Madelung Mechanics and Superoscillations (2405.06358v2)

Published 10 May 2024 in quant-ph

Abstract: In single-particle Madelung mechanics, the single-particle quantum state $\Psi(\vec{x},t) = R(\vec{x},t) e{iS(\vec{x},t)/\hbar}$ is interpreted as comprising an entire conserved fluid of classical point particles, with local density $R(\vec{x},t)2$ and local momentum $\vec{\nabla}S(\vec{x},t)$ (where $R$ and $S$ are real). The Schr\"{o}dinger equation gives rise to the continuity equation for the fluid, and the Hamilton-Jacobi equation for particles of the fluid, which includes an additional density-dependent quantum potential energy term $Q(\vec{x},t) = -\frac{\hbar2}{2m}\frac{\vec{\nabla}R(\vec{x},t)}{R(\vec{x},t)}$, which is all that makes the fluid behavior nonclassical. In particular, the quantum potential can become negative and create a nonclassical boost in the kinetic energy. This boost is related to superoscillations in the wavefunction, where the local frequency of $\Psi$ exceeds its global band limit. Berry showed that for states of definite energy $E$, the regions of superoscillation are exactly the regions where $Q(\vec{x},t)<0$. For energy superposition states with band-limit $E_+$, the situation is slightly more complicated, and the bound is no longer $Q(\vec{x},t)<0$. However, the fluid model provides a definite local energy for each fluid particle which allows us to define a local band limit for superoscillation, and with this definition, all regions of superoscillation are again regions where $Q(\vec{x},t)<0$ for general superpositions. An alternative interpretation of these quantities involving a \textit{reduced quantum potential} is reviewed and advanced, and a parallel discussion of superoscillation in this picture is given. Detailed examples are given which illustrate the role of the quantum potential and superoscillations in a range of scenarios.

Summary

We haven't generated a summary for this paper yet.

Whiteboard

Open Problems

We haven't generated a list of open problems mentioned in this paper yet.

Continue Learning

We haven't generated follow-up questions for this paper yet.

Authors (1)

Collections

Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.

Tweets

Sign up for free to view the 3 tweets with 13 likes about this paper.