Ghirardi–Rimini–Weber theory


The Ghirardi–Rimini–Weber theory is a spontaneous collapse theory in quantum mechanics, proposed in 1986 by GianCarlo Ghirardi, Alberto Rimini, and Tullio Weber.

Measurement problem and spontaneous collapses

has two fundamentally different dynamical principles: the linear and deterministic Schrödinger equation, and the nonlinear and stochastic wave packet reduction postulate. The orthodox interpretation, or Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics, posits a wave function collapse every time an observer performs measurement. One thus faces the problem of defining what an “observer” and a “measurement” are. Another issue of quantum mechanics is that it forecasts superpositions of macroscopic objects, which are not observed in Nature. The theory does not tell where the threshold between the microscopic and macroscopic worlds is, that is when quantum mechanics should leave space to classical mechanics. The aforementioned issues constitute the measurement problem in quantum mechanics.
Collapse theories avoid the measurement problem by merging the two dynamical principles of quantum mechanics in a unique dynamical description. The physical idea that underlies collapse theories is that particles undergo spontaneous wave-function collapses, which occur randomly both in time, and in space. The imprecise talk of “observer” and a “measurement” that plagues the orthodox interpretation is thus avoided because the wave function collapses spontaneously. Furthermore, thanks to a so called “amplification mechanism”, collapse theories recover both quantum mechanics for microscopic objects, and classical mechanics for macroscopic ones.
The GRW is the first spontaneous collapse theory that was devised. In the following years the field developed and different models were proposed, among which the CSL model, which is formulated in terms of identical particles; the Diósi–Penrose model, which relates the spontaneous collapse to gravity; the QMUPL model, that proves important mathematical results on collapse theories; the coloured QMUPL model, the only collapse model involving coloured stochastic processes for which the exact solution is known.

The theory

The first assumption of the GRW theory is that the wave function represents the most accurate possible specification of the state of a physical system. This is a feature that the GRW theory shares with the standard interpretation of Quantum Mechanics, and distinguishes it from hidden variable theories, like the De Broglie-Bohm theory, according to which the wave function does not give a complete description of a physical system. The GRW theory differs from standard quantum mechanics for the dynamical principles according to which the wave function evolves. For more philosophical issues related to the GRW theory and to collapse theories in general one should refer to.

Working principles

,
where is the state after the operator has localized the -th particle around the position.
,
where is the position operator of the -th particle, and is the localization distance.
These principles can be expressed in a more compact way with the statistical operator formalism. Since the localization process is Poissonian, in a time interval there is a probability that a collapse occurs, i.e. that the pure state is transformed into the following statistical mixture:
.
In the same time interval, there is a probability that the system keeps evolving according to the Schrödinger equation. Accordingly, the GRW master equation for particles reads
,
where is the Hamiltonian of the system, and the square brackets denote a commutator.
Two new parameters are introduced by the GRW theory, namely the collapse rate and the localization distance. These are phenomenological parameters, whose values are not fixed by any principle and should be understood as new constants of Nature. Comparison of the model's predictions with experimental data permits bounding of the values of the parameters. The collapse rate should be such that microscopic object are almost never localized, thus effectively recovering standard quantum mechanics. The value originally proposed was, while more recently Stephen L. Adler proposed that the value is more adequate. There is a general consensus on the value for the localization distance. This is a mesoscopic distance, such that microscopic superpositions are left unaltered, while macroscopic ones are collapsed.

Examples

When the wave function is hit by a sudden jump, the action of the localization operator essentially results in the multiplication of the wave function by the collapse Gaussian.
Let us consider a Gaussian wave function with spread, centered at, and let us assume that this undergoes a localization process at the position. One thus has
,
where is a normalization factor. Let us further assume that the initial state is delocalised, i.e. that. In this case one has
where is another normalization factor. One thus finds that after the sudden jump has occurred, the initially delocalised wave function has become localized.
Another interesting case is when the initial state is the superposition of two Gaussian states, centered at and respectively:. If the localization occurs e.g. around one has
If one assumes that  each Gaussian is localized and that the overall superposition is delocalised, one finds
We thus see that the Gaussian that is hit by the localization is left unchanged, while the other is exponentially suppressed.

Amplification mechanism

This is one of the most important features of the GRW theory, because it allows us to recover classical mechanics for macroscopic objects. Let us consider a rigid body of particles whose statistical operator evolves according to the master equation described above. We introduce the center of mass and relative position operators, which allow us to rewrite each particle's position operator as follows:. One can show that, when the system Hamiltonian can be split into a center of mass Hamiltonian and a relative Hamiltonian, the center of mass statistical operator evolves according to the following master equation:
where
One thus sees that the center of mass collapses with a rate that is the sum of the rates of its constituents: this is the amplification mechanism. If for simplicity one assumes that all particles collapse with the same rate, one simply gets.
An object that consists of an Avogadro's number of nucleons collapses almost instantly: GRW's and Adler's values of give respectively and. Fast reduction of macroscopic object superpositions is thus guaranteed, and the GRW theory effectively recovers classical mechanics for macroscopic objects.

Other features

We briefly review other interesting features of the GRW theory.