Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5130458 | Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part B: Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics | 2017 | 10 Pages |
â¢Calculations for thermalized systems include nonlinear and stochastic elements.â¢The irreversibility and stochasticity of statistical physics are also part of nature.â¢A gas is best represented by wave packets of the size of the thermal wave length.â¢These wave packets evolve non unitarily on time scales beyond the thermal time.
It is widely believed that the underlying reality behind statistical mechanics is a deterministic and unitary time evolution of a many-particle wave function, even though this is in conflict with the irreversible, stochastic nature of statistical mechanics. The usual attempts to resolve this conflict for instance by appealing to decoherence or eigenstate thermalization are riddled with problems. This paper considers theoretical physics of thermalized systems as it is done in practice and shows that all approaches to thermalized systems presuppose in some form limits to linear superposition and deterministic time evolution. These considerations include, among others, the classical limit, extensivity, the concepts of entropy and equilibrium, and symmetry breaking in phase transitions and quantum measurement. As a conclusion, the paper suggests that the irreversibility and stochasticity of statistical mechanics should be taken as a real property of nature. It follows that a gas of a macroscopic number N of atoms in thermal equilibrium is best represented by a collection of N wave packets of a size of the order of the thermal de Broglie wave length, which behave quantum mechanically below this scale but classically sufficiently far beyond this scale. In particular, these wave packets must localize again after scattering events, which requires stochasticity and indicates a connection to the measurement process.