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An operational interpretation of nonrelativistic quantum mechanics
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References
1969
Year
Quantum ScienceEngineeringQuantum ComputingPhysicsOperational InterpretationQuantum Statistical MechanicsNatural SciencesMeasurement ProblemQuantum Mechanical PropertyAtomic PhysicsNobel Prize WinnersQuantum TheoryComputational ChemistryQuantum PhysicsQuantum SystemQuantum EntanglementPhysical Properties
WHAT IS QUANTUM MECHANICS? A remarkable feature of the 1968 conference of Nobel prize winners in physics at Lindau is that it was possible for me to ask such a question in the presence of two of the founders of quantum mechanics, Werner Heisenberg and P.A.M. Dirac, more than 30 years after the discovery, in a lecture attended by 400 students who had recently begun their study of the subject. Several answers to the question are possible. The only easy one is that quantum mechanics is a discipline that provides a wonderful set of rules for calculating physical properties of matter. For such simple systems as hydrogen and helium atoms the calculated energy levels agree with experiment to fantastic accuracy. In more complicated cases the computations are difficult and the accuracy is lower, but it is reasonable to believe, in principle at least, that the theory would be adequate if only the calculational problems could be overcome.
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