Science
Related: About this forumHow Reality May Be a Sum of All Possible Realities - Wired
Richard Feynmans path integral is a powerful prediction machine and a philosophy. Physicists still struggle to figure out how to use it, and what it means.
THE MOST POWERFUL formula in physics starts with a slender S, the symbol for a sort of sum known as an integral. Further along comes a second S, representing a quantity known as action. Together, these twin Ss form the essence of an equation that is arguably the most effective diviner of the future yet devised.
The oracular formula is known as the Feynman path integral. As far as physicists can tell, it precisely predicts the behavior of any quantum systeman electron, a light ray, or even a black hole. The path integral has racked up so many successes that many physicists believe it to be a direct window into the heart of reality.
Its how the world really is, said Renate Loll, a theoretical physicist at Radboud University in the Netherlands.
But the equation, although it graces the pages of thousands of physics publications, is more of a philosophy than a rigorous recipe. It suggests that our reality is a sort of blendinga sumof all imaginable possibilities. But it does not tell researchers exactly how to carry out the sum. So physicists have spent decades developing an arsenal of approximation schemes for constructing and computing the integral for different quantum systems.
link to the long article here https://www.wired.com/story/how-reality-may-be-a-sum-of-all-possible-realities/
BootinUp: "fascinating"
Joinfortmill
(16,440 posts)Love this stuff but so far over my head
JudyM
(29,517 posts)And a little mind-bending.
usonian
(13,880 posts)If you know a little about physics, take a look at a photo from the fifth Solvay Conference on Physics, which was held from 24 to 29 October 1927.
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Wow.