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Phys. Rev. D 52, 2176–2182 (1995)

Evolution laws taking pure states to mixed states in quantum field theory

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William G. Unruh
CIAR Cosmology Program, Department of Physics, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada V6T 2A6

Robert M. Wald
Enrico Fermi Institute and Department of Physics, University of Chicago, 5640 South Ellis Avenue, Chicago, Illinois 60637-1433

Received 3 March 1995; published in the issue dated 15 August 1995

It has been argued that any evolution law taking pure states to mixed states in quantum field theory necessarily gives rise to violations of either causality or energy-momentum conservation in such a way as to have unacceptable consequences for ordinary laboratory physics. We show here that this is not the case by giving a simple class of examples of Markovian evolution laws where rapid evolution from pure states to mixed states occurs for a wide class of states with appropriate properties at the ‘‘Planck scale,’’ suitable locality and causality properties hold for all states, and the deviations from ordinary dynamics (and, in particular, violations of energy-momentum conservation) are unobservably small for all states which one could expect to produce in a laboratory. In addition, we argue (via consideration of other, non-Markovian models) that conservation of energy and momentum for all states is not fundamentally incompatible with causality in dynamical models in which pure states evolve to mixed states.

© 1995 The American Physical Society

URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevD.52.2176
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevD.52.2176
PACS:
04.60.-m, 03.70.+k, 04.70.Dy