Motion Is Discontinuous and Random Shan Gao @ ECUQ Project To those people who have been plagued by the quantum puzzle
|Everyone Can Understand Quantum> |
Today there are still many physicists who believe in the existence of many worlds. But if they know that the wave function describes quantum motion, they will surely wake up from the fantasyland of many worlds.
There is one and only continuous time flow.
According to the picture of RDM (Random Discontinuous Motion), the superposition state of an object exists in a form of time division. Such a division of the whole time flow is random and discontinuous. Each branch of the superposition occupies a discontinuous time sub-flow.
There is only one object all the time, and it moves randomly and discontinuously throughout all possible branches such as those of position in the superposition during a continuous time interval. Therefore, there is one and only world in which time is continuous. Each object in a superposition state only undergoes RDM in this world.
Certainly, an object undergoing RDM can also be in a definite state in the only world. This means that it is in this state all the time during a continuous time interval. The state doesn’t share the whole continuous time flow with other states.
In fact, continuous motion in Newton’s mechanics also exists in a form of time division, but such division is continuous and nonrandom; an object only occupies continuous positions during a continuous time interval. Since there is only one world for continuous motion, there should also exist one world for RDM.
Today there are still many physicists who believe in the existence of many worlds. But if they know that the wave function, especially the superposition state, actually describes RDM, they will surely wake up from the fantasyland of many worlds.