Bulletin of the American Physical Society
53rd Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics
Volume 67, Number 7
Monday–Friday, May 30–June 3 2022; Orlando, Florida
Session 2A: 7th Annual GPMFC Workshop on Exploring Physics With Quantum-Enabled Precision Measurement
8:50 AM–5:30 PM,
Monday, May 30, 2022
Room: Grand Ballroom E
Chair: David Hanneke, Amherst; Jacob Taylor
Abstract: 2A.00012 : Bounds on the bizarrity of the Universe from experiments with trapped, cold, charged particles
3:00 PM–3:30 PM
Presenter:
Hartmut Haeffner
(University of California, Berkeley)
Author:
Hartmut Haeffner
(University of California, Berkeley)
In the first, S. Weinberg was wondering whether the laws of nature at the quantum scale are nonlinear (Ann.Phys. (N.Y.), 194, 336-386 (1989)). However, no indications of nonlinearities could be detected even by using high precision spectroscopy. In addition, it became apparent that nonlinearities should lead to non causal effects and thus the idea of a nonlinear quantum theory became less attractive. However, recently Kaplan and Rajendran (arXiv:2106.10576 [hep-th]) managed to add non-linear and state-dependent terms without violating causality. Interestingly this extension rendered the existing experimental tests ineffective, mainly because the quantum mechanical test objects used to exclude nonlinearities were not localized. This delocalization leads to a dilution of the self-interaction between the superposition states of the wavefunction and hence the observable energy shift. I will discuss new experiments where the quantum mechanical object is tied to a macroscopic object (such as an ion trap) leading to sufficient localization such that a self-interaction could lead to measurable non-linearities.
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