Tags
Language
Tags
April 2024
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
31 1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30 1 2 3 4
https://canv.ai/
The picture is generated by canv.ai

We are excited to announce that Canv.ai now features a built-in translator, allowing you to communicate in your native language. You can write prompts in your language, and they will be automatically translated into English, facilitating communication and the exchange of ideas!

We value freedom of speech and guarantee the absence of censorship on Canv.ai. At the same time, we hope and believe in the high moral standards of our users, which will help maintain a respectful and constructive atmosphere.


👉 Check for yourself!

Quantum Theory and Its Stochastic Limit

Posted By: AvaxGenius
Quantum Theory and Its Stochastic Limit

Quantum Theory and Its Stochastic Limit by Luigi Accardi , Igor Volovich , Yun Gang Lu
English | PDF | 2002 | 485 Pages | ISBN : 3540419284 | 33.6 MB

Nowadays it is becoming clearer and clearer that, in the description of natural phenomena, the triadic scheme - microseopie, mesoscopic, macroscopic - is only a rough approximation and that there are many levels of description, probably an infinite hierarchy, in which the specific properties of a given level express some kind of cumulative or collective behaviour of properties or sys­ tems corresponding to the lower levels. One of the most interesting challenges for contemporary natural sciences is the comprehension of the connections among these different levels of description of reality and the deduction of the laws of higher levels in this hierarchy from basic laws corresponding to lower levels. Since these cumulative or collective phenomena are, typically, nonlin­ ear effects, the transition from this general program to concrete scientific achievements requires the developement of techniques which allow physical information to be extracted from nonlinear quantum systems. Explicitly in­ tegrable examples of such systems are rare, and the most interesting physical phenomena are not captured by them. Even in the case of linear systems the fact that an explicit solution is formally available is often useless, since it is impossible to interpret interesting physical phenomena from it.