Quantum measurement | Interpretations of quantum mechanics

Copenhagen interpretation

The Copenhagen interpretation is a collection of views about the meaning of quantum mechanics, principally attributed to Niels Bohr and Werner Heisenberg. It is one of the oldest of numerous proposed interpretations of quantum mechanics, as features of it date to the development of quantum mechanics during 1925–1927, and it remains one of the most commonly taught. There is no definitive historical statement of what the Copenhagen interpretation is. There are some fundamental agreements and disagreements between the views of Bohr and Heisenberg. For example, Heisenberg emphasized a sharp "cut" between the observer (or the instrument) and the system being observed, while Bohr offered an interpretation that is independent of a subjective observer or measurement or collapse, which relies on an "irreversible" or effectively irreversible process, which could take place within the quantum system. Features common to Copenhagen-type interpretations include the idea that quantum mechanics is intrinsically indeterministic, with probabilities calculated using the Born rule, and the principle of complementarity, which states that objects have certain pairs of complementary properties that cannot all be observed or measured simultaneously. Moreover, the act of "observing" or "measuring" an object is irreversible, and no truth can be attributed to an object, except according to the results of its measurement. Copenhagen-type interpretations hold that quantum descriptions are objective, in that they are independent of physicists' mental arbitrariness. Over the years, there have been many objections to aspects of Copenhagen-type interpretations, including the discontinuous and stochastic nature of the "observation" or "measurement" process, the apparent subjectivity of requiring an observer, the difficulty of defining what might count as a measuring device, and the seeming reliance upon classical physics in describing such devices. (Wikipedia).

Copenhagen interpretation
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Related pages

EPR paradox | Popper's experiment | Determinism | Schrödinger equation | Ensemble interpretation | Albert Einstein | Philosophical interpretation of classical physics | Probability | Relational quantum mechanics | Bohr–Einstein debates | Hydrogen atom | Heisenberg cut | Many-worlds interpretation | Information theory | Interpretations of quantum mechanics | Wave function collapse | Transactional interpretation | Born rule | Stochastic | Bayesian probability | Von Neumann–Wigner interpretation | Consistent histories | Helium atom | Quantum entanglement | Wave–particle duality | Measurement in quantum mechanics | Counterfactual definiteness | Matrix (mathematics) | Richard Feynman | Ontic | Quantum decoherence