Particle-wave duality: a dichotomy between symmetry and asymmetry

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Author(s)
Vaccaro, Joan A
Griffith University Author(s)
Year published
2012
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Symmetry plays a central role in many areas of modern physics. Here, we show that it also underpins the dual particle and wave nature of quantum systems.We begin by noting that a classical point particle breaks translational symmetry, whereas a wave with uniform amplitude does not. This provides a basis for associating particle nature with asymmetry and wave nature with symmetry. We derive expressions for the maximum amount of classical information we can have about the symmetry and asymmetry of a quantum system with respect to an arbitrary group. We find that the sum of the information about the symmetry (wave nature) and ...
View more >Symmetry plays a central role in many areas of modern physics. Here, we show that it also underpins the dual particle and wave nature of quantum systems.We begin by noting that a classical point particle breaks translational symmetry, whereas a wave with uniform amplitude does not. This provides a basis for associating particle nature with asymmetry and wave nature with symmetry. We derive expressions for the maximum amount of classical information we can have about the symmetry and asymmetry of a quantum system with respect to an arbitrary group. We find that the sum of the information about the symmetry (wave nature) and the asymmetry (particle nature) is bounded by log(D), where D is the dimension of the Hilbert space. The combination of multiple systems is shown to exhibit greater symmetry and thus a more wavelike character. In particular, a class of entangled systems is shown to be capable of exhibiting wave-like symmetry as a whole while exhibiting particle-like asymmetry internally. We also show that superdense coding can be viewed as being essentially an interference phenomenon involving wave-like symmetry with respect to the group of Pauli operators.
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View more >Symmetry plays a central role in many areas of modern physics. Here, we show that it also underpins the dual particle and wave nature of quantum systems.We begin by noting that a classical point particle breaks translational symmetry, whereas a wave with uniform amplitude does not. This provides a basis for associating particle nature with asymmetry and wave nature with symmetry. We derive expressions for the maximum amount of classical information we can have about the symmetry and asymmetry of a quantum system with respect to an arbitrary group. We find that the sum of the information about the symmetry (wave nature) and the asymmetry (particle nature) is bounded by log(D), where D is the dimension of the Hilbert space. The combination of multiple systems is shown to exhibit greater symmetry and thus a more wavelike character. In particular, a class of entangled systems is shown to be capable of exhibiting wave-like symmetry as a whole while exhibiting particle-like asymmetry internally. We also show that superdense coding can be viewed as being essentially an interference phenomenon involving wave-like symmetry with respect to the group of Pauli operators.
View less >
Journal Title
Proceedings of the Royal Society A
Volume
468
Issue
2140
Copyright Statement
© 2012 Royal Society. This is the author-manuscript version of this paper. Reproduced in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher. Please refer to the journal website for access to the definitive, published version.
Subject
Mathematical sciences
Physical sciences
Quantum physics not elsewhere classified
Engineering