Abstract
Collapse models predict the spontaneous collapse of the wave function, in order to avoid the emergence of macroscopic superpositions. In their mass-dependent formulation, they claim that the collapse of any system’s wave function depends on its mass. Neutral K, D, B mesons are oscillating systems that are given by Nature as superposition of two distinct mass eigenstates. Thus they are unique laboratory for testing collapse models that are sensitive to the mass. In this paper we derive—for the single mesons and bipartite entangled mesons—the effect of the mass-proportional CSL (Continuous Spontaneous Localization) collapse model on the dynamics on neutral mesons. We compare the theoretical prediction with experimental data from different accelerator facilities.
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1 Introduction
Flavored neutral mesons, those with a net non-zero strangeness, charm, or beauty content, are among the most fascinating systems in elementary particle physics. Particle and antiparticle are distinguished only by the flavor quantum number, exhibiting the phenomenon of flavor oscillations in their time evolution [1, 2] (see also [3–10]). In the following we will focus on K-mesons, but our conclusions can be easily generalized to the other flavored meson systems, as discussed at the end of the paper.
Flavor oscillation is a direct consequence of the superposition principle of quantum mechanics. Nowadays many scientists question its validity [11–14], and several experiments have been performed [15–20] or proposed, which challenge it. On the theoretical side, models of spontaneous wave function collapse [21–38] explicitly predict that the superposition principle is valid only at the microscopic scale, while it gradually breaks down when moving towards the macroscopic scale. Therefore, by altering the standard quantum dynamics, collapse model predict a different behavior for kaon oscillations. Aim of this paper is to compute such an effect, and compare it with available experimental data. To this end, we will use one of the most popular collapse model, the mass-proportional CSL (Continuous Spontaneous Localization) model [22, 23], and will perform the calculation of the probabilities, that are observed in experiments, to second order perturbation theory and from that deduce the higher orders. Comparison with experimental data will allow to conclude whether current or future experiments are sensitive to this effect.
One of the difficulties in computing the effect of collapse models on kaon oscillation is that these models act on the spatial part of the wave function—since the collapse is supposed to localize wave functions in space—while oscillations occur for the internal degrees of freedom. What happens then, is that the noise responsible for the collapse of the wave function acts like a random medium through which the particles propagate, modifying their evolution and also the oscillatory behavior. By resorting to standard quantum field theoretical tools, we will compute analytically such an effect. Note that the time evolution of K-mesons is involved, the two distinct mass eigenstates have considerably different decay constants, and, therefore, it is not straightforward to compute e.g. by dimensionality arguments the order of the effect.
2 Kaon Phenomenology and the Mass-Proportional CSL Model
We start by recalling why kaons oscillate. For convenience of the readers we keep the discussion here short and more details can be find in Appendix A and references therein. The basic observation is that the mass eigenstates are different from the flavour eigenstates. For kaons, there are two mass eigenstates, the short state |K S 〉 and the long state |K L 〉, as well as two flavor eigenstates, |K 0〉 and \(\vert \bar{K}^{0} \rangle\). In this paper, we work in the approximation that there is no CP violation: this implies that |K S 〉 and |K L 〉 are orthogonal.Footnote 1 The relation between the mass and the flavour eigenstates is given by:
During the time evolution, the mass eigenstates change by acquiring different phase factors, depending on their mass.Footnote 2 The phenomenon of flavor oscillation arises because what we measure are not the mass eigenstates, but the flavor eigenstates, which are superpositions of mass eigenstates. The different phase factors in front of the mass eigenstates change the superposition, making it possible, for example, to start with a |K 0〉 and end up with a \(\vert \bar {K}^{0} \rangle\).
According to collapse models, the time evolution of the mass eigenstates is different compared to the one given by standard quantum mechanics. Hence we expect to see a different behavior in kaon oscillations. According to the mass proportional CSL model [22, 23], the evolution of the state vector is given by the non-linear equation:
where 〈M(x)〉:=〈ϕ t |M(x)|ϕ t 〉. Here H is the standard quantum Hamiltonian of the system and the other two terms induce the collapse of the wave function in space. The mass m 0 is a reference mass, which is taken equal to that of a nucleon. The parameter γ is a positive coupling constant which sets the strength of the collapse process, while \(M({\bf x})\) is a smeared mass density operator:
where \(\psi_{j}^{\dagger} (\mathbf{y} )\), ψ j (y) are, respectively, the creation and annihilation operators of a particle of type j, namely having mass m j , in the space point y. Neutral kaons are spin zero particles, thus the spin will be of no relevance for the following calculations. The smearing function \(g({\bf x})\) is usually taken to be a Gaussian:
where r C is the second new phenomenological constant of the model. The standard numerical value of this correlation length r C is [21, 24, 26]:
while, in the literature, two different values for the collapse strength γ have been proposed. The first value has been originally proposed by Ghirardi, Pearle and Rimini [24]
in analogy with the GRW model [21]. The second value has been proposed by Adler, inspired by the analysis of the process of latent image formation according to collapse models, and amounts to [25]
Finally, W t (x) is an ensemble of independent Wiener processes, one for each point in space.
Working with non-linear equations is notoriously difficult. As shown e.g. in Ref. [27] the experimentally testable predictions of the model—when averaged over the noise—do not change if the real noise W t (x) is replaced by an imaginary noise iW t (x). In this way, one loses the collapse properties, i.e. the non-linear terms, of the equation. However, the advantage of having an imaginary noise is that the evolution is described by a standard Schrödinger equation with a random Hamiltonian:
where
and \(\xi_{t}(\mathbf{x}) = \frac{dW_{t}(\mathbf{x})}{dt}\) is a white noise field, with correlation function \(\mathbb{E}[ \xi_{t}(\mathbf{x}) \xi_{s}(\mathbf {y})] = \delta(t-s) \delta({\bf x-y})\). As such, w(x,t) is a Gaussian noise field, with zero mean and the correlation function:
In the following, we will be a bit more general without making the calculation more complicated, and we will assume that the noise has a general time correlation function f(t−s) instead of a white noise time-correlator δ(t−s).
In our analysis, we treat the kaons as non-relativistic particles, which is in accordance with the experimental situation at some acceleration facilities. Accordingly, the Hamiltonian for the mass eigenstates is given by (j=S,L; short or long)
with
and
The Hamiltonian includes two contributions: the standard Schrödinger term \(\mathcal {H}_{\mathcal{S}} (x )=\mathcal{H}_{\mathcal{S}}^{S} (x )+\mathcal{H}_{\mathcal{S}}^{L} (x )\) and the term \(\mathcal{N} (x )=\mathcal{N}^{S} (x )+\mathcal{N}^{L} (x )\) which accounts for the collapse. Note that in \(\mathcal{H}_{S} (x )\) we have included also the mass terms. These terms are usually ignored, since they lead only to a constant shift of the energy, which implies no observable effect. In the specific situation of kaons, where we have a superposition of two different mass eigenstates, it is fundamental to keep it.
Indeed, for most investigations of the kaon phenomenology the kinetic part is not relevant and one introduces an effective Hamiltonian with two different mass eigenstates, i.e. the system is treated as a two state system analogously to spin-\(\frac{1}{2}\) particles [3, 4] and the two relevant bases—if \(\mathcal{CP}\) violation is neglected—are the strangeness (flavor) basis and mass eigenstate basis. For convenience of the readers we provide a summary in Appendix A.
Since the effect of the CSL noise is to localize the wavefunction in space, we cannot simplify our model by neglecting the kinetic part and we need to work in a standard field theoretical background. In order to compute the effect of collapse models on their evolution, we must specify therefore the spatial part of the wave function, the form of the wave function in space, which will be localized by the noise field. This means that, as said before, the change in the oscillatory behavior of kaons, according to the collapse dynamics, is an indirect, not a direct, effect of the collapse process.
In the following, we focus our attention on computing the probability that, starting from a |K 0〉 state at time t=0, we end up in a \(\vert \bar{K}^{0} \rangle\) state at a later time. The others possible transition probabilities (|K 0〉⟶|K 0〉, \(\vert \bar{K}^{0} \rangle\longrightarrow \vert \bar{K}^{0} \rangle\) and \(\vert \bar{K}^{0} \rangle\longrightarrow \vert K^{0} \rangle\)) can be computed in a very similar way. In order to keep the computation as simple as possible, we assume that the initial state is a plane wave with definite momentum p i . Therefore, the quantity we wish to compute is:
where we assumed that also the final state is a momentum eigenstate, and we sum over all the possible final states. Here, \(\mathbb{E}\) denotes the stochastic average with respect to the noise of the background field. It is convenient to express the matrix elements in terms of the mass eigenstates, instead of the strangeness eigenstates, since they are the diagonal states of the Hamiltonian and, therefore, provide the simplest form of the time evolution:
where i,j=S,L and \(\alpha_{S}=\alpha_{L}=\beta_{L}=1/\sqrt{2}\), \(\beta _{S}=-1/\sqrt{2}\) [the parameters α,β change accordingly for the other transition probabilities]. The second equation is due to the fact that since the structure of the Hamiltonian is given by H(t)=H S (t)+H L (t), namely not mixing of the mass eigenstates, the time evolution operator factorizes U(t)=U S (t)⊗U L (t). This implies that if a mass eigenstate is produced at time t=0 it persists its identity for any later time point. This is strongly supported by experimental data.
Substituting Eq. (15) into Eq. (14) we get
We now compute these probabilities.
3 Derivation of the Probabilities for One-Particle States
We cannot solve the equations of motion exactly, because of the noise term in the Hamiltonian. Therefore, we move to the interaction picture and apply a standard perturbative approach. We treat \(\mathcal {H}_{\mathcal{S}} (x )\) as the unperturbed Hamiltonian, and \(\mathcal{N} (x )\) as a perturbation. This is certainly a very reasonable assumption since the noise coupling constant γ is very small.
3.1 The Interaction Picture
In the interaction picture, the states evolve as follows [39]
with
given via the well known Dyson series. The relation between the evolution operator in the Schrödinger picture and the corresponding one in the interaction picture is given by
The fields, on the other hand, evolve accordingly to the free Hamiltonian, therefore we expand the wave function into a superposition of plane waves
In order to avoid possible divergences coming from the fact that we are working with plane waves, we quantize our system in a box with side L by imposing periodic boundary conditions. This implies that the components of the wave vector \(\bf k\) take only discrete values \(k_{j}=\frac{2\pi\hbar}{L}n_{kj}\), with n kj integer. The energy is \(E_{k}=mc^{2}+\frac{\mathbf{k}^{2}}{2m}\) and b k is the annihilation operator of a particle with momentum \(\bf k\). Since kaons are bosons, their operators have to satisfy the commutation relations \([b_{\mathbf{k}},b_{\mathbf{k}'}^{\dagger}]=\delta_{\mathbf{k},\mathbf {k}'}\). The total Hamiltonian can then be written as
At the end of the calculation, we take the limit L→∞, which amounts to making the substitutions:
We have now introduced all the necessary elements for computing the matrix elements and the transition probabilities.
3.2 Computation of the Transition Amplitudes
We start by focusing our attention on the computation of the transition amplitude of a certain mass eigenstate T j (p f ,p i ,t). Since this computation is independent of the mass eigenstate j=S,L, we drop this index in this section. The interesting expression to compute is
where \(E_{f}=m c^{2}+\frac{\mathbf{p}_{f}^{2}}{2m}\) and |Ω〉 is the vacuum state. The perturbative scheme goes as follows. We keep terms up to second order, which—when averaged over the noise—give the first order contribution to the oscillation. The reason is that the corrections are proportional to the average of products of the noise computed in different space time points, which are not zero when the noise appears a even number of times in the matrix elements. Therefore we have
Accordingly, the transition probability becomes:
where each term corresponds to one of the first three terms of the Dyson series. It is possible to give a representation by means of Feynman diagrams for each one of these three terms:
where the solid lines refer to the kaon and the dotted lines to the noise. The first term, T (0), is trivial:
The second term is given by:
Using the plane-wave expansion of the fields given by Eq. (20), and a similar expansion for the adjoint of the field, we get:
and therefore:
The third term is given by:
The matrix element becomes:
and thus we obtain:
3.3 Computation of the Transition Probability
The next step is to compute the transition probability P kj (p i ;t), defined in Eq. (16); now we reintroduce the mass-index k and j. In the interaction picture, it reads:
where T Ij (p f ;p i ;t) is the sum of the terms inside the square bracket in Eq. (25). When averaged over the noise, the non-zero terms are those which contain an even number of noises (in the graphical representation in terms of Feynman diagrams, only products of diagrams having an even number of dotted lines). Keeping terms only up to second order, we have:
Therefore we get:
where we have introduced the abbreviations:
These two terms are explicitly computed in Appendices B and C. Here we report only the final result, which is:
and
where f(s) is the temporal correlation function of the noise. Inserting the expression for \(I_{jk}^{ (1 )} (\mathbf {p}_{i};t )\) and \(I_{j}^{ (2 )} (\mathbf {p}_{i};t )\) written above in Eq. (35) one obtains:
where in the second line we use the definition given in Eq. (13). Finally, the transition probability, Eq. (16), is computed to be:
In analogous way we can find the probability that a K 0 remains K 0 with the time evolution:
The computations starting from the anti-kaon are completely analogous, since we neglected \(\mathcal{CP}\) violation. Let us list here on two observations:
-
(1)
The probabilities \(P_{K^{0}\rightarrow K^{0}} (\mathbf {p}_{i} )\) and \(P_{K^{0}\rightarrow\bar{K}^{0}} (\mathbf{p}_{i} )\) sum to 1, which means that there are no particle losses.
-
(2)
The factor after the cosine is due to the noise present in this model, i.e. if there is no noise (γ=0) the square bracket gives 1 and arrive at the standard oscillations formulaFootnote 3 [9, 40].
Since the effect of the noise is usually very similar to the one given by the decoherence [9, 40], and it is well known from the literature that in such cases decoherence damps the oscillation with an exponential function, we can think at the term inside the curely bracket as the first term of the series of an exponential function. Therefore, we can guess that the exact result for the probability transition from a kaon to an anti-kaon could reasonably be:
To conclude the computation on a single particle, we can include the decay of the particle adding to the free Hamiltonian H S an imaginary term:
This changes the previous computation by sending \(E_{i}^{ (j )}\longrightarrow E_{i}^{ (j )}-\frac{i}{2}\varGamma_{j}\) and one can easily notice that the only change consists in multiplying each P kj (p i ;t) with the exponential function \(e^{-\frac{\varGamma_{k}+\varGamma_{j}}{2\hbar}t}\) in order to take the decay into account. Thus we obtain the final result:
where now we have assumed that the noise is white in time, i.e. f(s)=δ(s). This is the standard situation with the CSL model. Similar results hold for the other transition probabilities.
4 The Collapse Model for Two Particle States
At the DAΦNE collider [41–44] neutral kaons are copiously produced in an entangled antisymmetric state:
We want here to investigate how the mass-proportional CSL model changes the time evolution of entangled states. In order to obtain a more general result, we perform the computation for an arbitrary two-particle state. One particle evolves to the left hand side and the other particle evolves to the right hand side, for which they need the time t l ,t r , respectively. It is convenient to use the mass basis |K S K S 〉,|K S K L 〉,|K L K S 〉,|K L K L 〉, where the state on the left hand side is a plane wave with momentum −p i and the one on the right hand side is a plane wave with momentum p i . In the Fock space framework, this means for example \(\vert K_{S}K_{L} \rangle=a_{S}^{\dagger } (-\mathbf{p}_{i} )a_{K}^{\dagger} (\mathbf{p}_{i} )\vert \varOmega \rangle\). Since we are considering only states with two particles with definite momenta ±p i , the four states above form a complete basis. So the generic initial state can be decomposed as:
Let us assume that we want to know the probability to find the left particle at time t l in the state |F l ,p l 〉=∑ m=S,L β m |K m ,p l 〉 and the right particle at time t r in the state |F r ,p r 〉=∑ n=S,L γ n |K n ,p r 〉. Here |F l 〉 and |F r 〉 can be mass or flavor eigenstates. In the end we have to sum over all p l and all p r since we are interested in a result, which is independent from the particular final momentum of the particles. We start by computing the amplitude:
since it gives the probability of interest:
The noise average involves two terms describing the evolution of the particle moving to the right and left hand side, respectively. The mixing terms are in the plane wave picture important. As we show explicitly in Appendix D, however, in the more realistic situation of wave packets propagating in opposite directions, these mixed terms are negligible. This considerably simplifies the computation to
The terms inside the square bracket are the same as those we computed in the previous sections for the single particle case, therefore we obtain a factorization of the probabilities, i.e.
with P kj (p i ;t) given in Eq. (39).
For the antisymmetric initial state (45) (\(\alpha _{SL}=-\alpha_{LS}=\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}\) else α ij =0) and choosing the final states, |F l 〉=|K 0〉 (\(\beta_{S}=\beta_{L}=\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}\)) and |F r 〉=|K 0〉 (\(\gamma _{S}=\gamma_{L}=\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}\)), respectively, we have to compute
where in the case of white noise field we have:
and thus:
In the next section, we comment on the experimental implications of the above formula.
5 Estimation of the Effect of the Collapse on Single and Entangled Kaons & Connections to Other Models
Now we want to compare decoherence models (interactions of a quantum system with an environment) to the prediction of the CSL model for single and entangled meson systems. For entangled meson systems there exist experiments that compare the experimental data with specific decoherence models. We will use the experimentally obtained bounds on possible decoherence effects to find out whether the effect of the CSL model on the interference term can be observed.
The dynamics of closed quantum systems are covered by the Schrödinger equation. These are systems which do not suffer any unwanted interactions with the outside classical or quantum world—generally termed environment—and are consequently described by unitary dynamics. However, in the real world, it is often not possible to avoid interactions of the system of interest with other (quantum) systems, such systems are denoted as open quantum systems. The whole system S+E, where S is the quantum system under investigation and E is the environment, is assumed to be closed. Possible decoherence effects arise due to some interaction of the system with its environment. Sources for “standard” decoherence effects can be the experimental background or noise of the experimental setup. “Nonstandard” decoherence effects may result from fundamental “modifications” of QM or may be traced back to the influence of quantum gravity—quantum fluctuations in the space-time structure on the Planck mass scale—and arise in general on a different energy scale. Assuming certain conditions, a master equation, such as e.g. Lindblad master equation [45, 46] that assume only Markovian interactions, can be obtained which allows to handle the dynamics (e.g. decoherence models) without modeling any environment. Note that in general the decay property can as well treated by the Lindblad master equation [47], the prize to pay is that the Hilbert space has to be enlarged at least by two dimensions. In the following, we use the non-hermitian Hamiltonian to describe the decay property and describe by the Lindblad generators solely the effect of decoherence.
In the last section we found that the effect of the collapse on the interference term is a damping in addition to the damping due to the decay property. This effect is also observed in the case one assumes that during the time evolution of the single or two-particle state the kaon or kaons interact with an environment in the mass basis {K S ,K L }, which was investigated by the authors of Ref. [40]. They treated the neutral kaons as an open quantum system with Markovian interactions (for an overview on open quantum system see e.g. [48]) and their dynamics is given by the Liouville–von Neumann equation with an additional Lindblad term:
which gives rise to the well known Lindblad master equation [45, 46]:
They further assumed that the interaction occurs in the mass basis. For the single particle case one chooses the Lindblad generators to be \(L_{S,L}=\sqrt{\varLambda_{\textrm{single}}} |K_{S,L}\rangle\langle K_{S,L}|\) where Λ single is the strength of the interaction. The solution of the components of the density matrix ρ=∑ i,j=S,L ρ ij (t)|K i 〉〈K j | is given by:
thus, as we expect, only the off-diagonal terms are affected by the interaction with the environment. In particular, the probability to find an antikaon when a kaon state was produced at time t=0 becomes:
which is of the same structure as the result, Eq. (44), based on the mass dependent CLS model. In the two particle case we have a similar behaviour if the two Lindblad generators are chosen to be \(L_{1}=\sqrt{\varLambda_{\textrm {two-particle}}} |e_{1}\rangle\langle e_{1}| \) and \(L_{2}=\sqrt{\varLambda _{\textrm{two-particle}}}|e_{2}\rangle\langle e_{2}|\) with |e 1〉=|K S 〉⊗|K L 〉 and |e 2〉=|K L 〉⊗|K S 〉. Then for the initial antisymmetric state ρ=|ψ −〉〈ψ −| with \(|\psi^{-}\rangle=\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}\{ |e_{1}\rangle-|e_{2}\rangle\}\) we obtain the following time dependent density matrix before one kaon decayed:
The authors of Ref. [40] assumed that only the two-particle state undergoes decoherence, namely only the two-particle state interacts with the environment. That means that after one particle decayed the time evolution is given by the single non-hermitian Hamiltonian H single=M+iΓ, where the hermitian operators M is the mass-operator (covering the unitary part of the evolution) and the operator Γ describes the decay property (see Appendix A for more detail on the Hamiltonian. Note that there is no additional effect assumed due to decoherence assumed. The underlying philosophy is the assumption that an entangled two-particle state is one entity and, consequently, has a single time evolution and interacts holistically with the environment. Therefore, the joint probability to obtain same strangeness states at different times t l ,t r is given by [40]
where ρ(t) is given by Eq. (58), \(U^{\textrm{single}}_{t}\) is the time evolution of a single kaon without decoherence effects and the two-particle projector is given by
This joint probability has a similar structure as the result obtained from the CSL model, Eq. (53), except that here the damping is not sensitive to the sum of the times, but on the time value corresponding to the first measured kaon. Thus these two models differ and an experiment with a proper time resolution should be able to distinguish these two models. For B-mesons the time resolution of the experimental data obtain at the accelerator facility KEK was investigated [49]. The chosen experimental method turned not out to be sensitive enough in obtaining the needed time resolution (for details see the PhD thesis of Gerald Richter [49]).
Another option is to assume that both kaons, though being entangled, separately interact with the environment. This is the case for the considered CSL model, because it assumes that the contribution from the collapse is the sum of contributions to the Hamiltonian of the short-lived state and the long-lived state. It is worth noting here, however, that different to the above discussed decoherence models, the CSL model predicts the value of the decoherence parameter Λ explicitly.
In the following we want to compare these decoherence models with data of experiments and by that estimate whether a collapse as predicted by the CSL model can be experimentally observed in flavor oscillations.
There exist precision experiments for neutral K-mesons and neutral B-mesons in the antisymmetric entangled state |ψ −〉 that investigate bounds on these possible decoherence effects or differently stated on the stability of nonlocal correlations. They consider the joint probabilities and model them by one single phenomenological parameter ζ multiplying the interference effect, i.e.:
From data one obtains bounds on ζ quantifying the strength of the interactions with the environment. The authors of Ref. [50] analyzed the 1999-CPLEAR experiment [51] and found the following upper bounds if the decoherence effect is assumed to be in the mass basis (as discussed above) averaged over both measured time configurations
from which we estimate via \(1-\bar{\zeta}\equiv e^{-\varLambda_{\textrm {two-particle}}\cdot\min \{t_{l},t_{r} \}}\) the upper bound of effects coming from possible interactions with the environment to be (C.L. …Confidence Level):
Note that we have only in this case a one-to-one correspondence between the ζ approach and the Λ two-particle approach since in both measured time configurations the minimal time was the same.
Let us compare this result with the theoretical prediction given by the mass-proportional CSL model. Using the stronger value suggested by Adler for γ, namely γ=10−22 cm3 s−1 [25], and recalling that r C =10−5 cm, |m S −m L |≃3.5⋅10−12 MeV/c 2 [52], and m 0≃9.4⋅102 MeV/c 2 [52], we obtain:
Thus the expected effect is by many orders smaller than the sensitivity given by the CPLEAR experiment [51].
The KLOE collaboration [41–43] exploring the antisymmetric entangled kaon state produced at the Φ resonance has also investigated possible decoherence effect. It is a very clean experiment to look for small effects. The above idea of the ζ-parameter [50] was investigated—differently from the above described experiment—for the final states π + π − on both sides. Moreover, the decoherence strength ζ was achieved by integration over the natural distribution of the time differences. It gives so far the highest precision due to a \(\mathcal{CP}\) suppressing mechanism, i.e. the value is:
Collapse models apply to all systems, and for small times one has: ζ≈Λ CSL⋅t. From that we can estimate that the sensitivity of the above experiment, namely the statistical sensitivity, the detector resolutions and the performance of the chosen setup, is not high enough to show the possible effects of the CSL model. Certainly, one has in this case to do the calculation including \(\mathcal{CP}\) violation, but the final conclusion should not change significantly.
In summary, the experimental situation at the DAΦNE collider, where the experiments of the KLOE Collaboration are performed, provides a very clean environment in the sense that environmental effects can be kept low. As the above averaged value of ζ shows, however, the limiting errors are the statistical one and the systematic one given by the present technology. Looking for better suited time measurements (no average), better suited observables and more statistics might considerably enhance the sensitivity.
Let us now discuss the other meson systems. For all mesons types except the K-mesons the decay widths are in good approximation equal (see Appendix A), Γ L ≃Γ H ≃Γ, thus the probabilities to find on both sides the same flavor eigenstates M 0=B,D,B s at different times is given by (compare with Eq. (61)):
hence the effect of the decay property is only an overall effect. Let us compute the effect predicted by the CSL model using the data of [52] for these mesons:
We observe that the effect of the collapse compared with the mean time is the best for the B s -meson. For B-mesons estimates for ζ B-mesons exists [49, 53–55], they are again far from the needed accuracy. Last but no least let us mention that authors discuss possible decoherence effects arising from different effects, e.g. the author of Ref. [56] discusses decoherence arising from the presence of dark energy in the universe and concludes that a possible decoherence effects due to quantum gravity strongly depends on the details of the structure of the quantum foam.
6 Conclusions
In this paper we addressed the question whether models of spontaneous wave function collapse, which modify the standard quantum evolution by adding non-linear and stochastic terms to the Schrödinger equation, are testable, or not, for single and even entangled neutral meson systems in High Energy Physics. If spontaneous collapses occur in Nature, we expect they would affect these systems and their flavor oscillation mechanism in a non trivial way.
We have focussed our analysis on the mass-proportional CSL (Continuous Spontaneous Localization) model [22, 23] and assumed that the contributions of the two different mass eigenstates are independently added to the Hamiltonian. With that we connected the spatiotemporal CSL collapse mechanism with the two dimensional dynamics describing the flavor oscillations. In order to perform the lengthly and involved computation we had to use different methods. First, we replaced the collapse noise with an imaginary noise that has been shown to produce all the experimentally testable predictions of the CSL model. Next, the noise has been treated as a small perturbation. Moving to the interaction picture we derived order by order via Dyson series the transition amplitudes. Via them we obtained the probabilities of interest for single and bipartite systems. In the very last step we assumed that the noise is white in time. Consequently, via our computation one can in future also consider the effects of different noise correlation functions.
The result of the computed probabilities within the CSL model shows that the oscillation terms are affected by an exponential damping. It is sensitive to the mass difference squared and the two phenomenological parameters of the CSL model, which, if the theory is taken seriously, acquire the status of new constants of nature. They are currently fixed to certain numbers [25] which are compatible with the results of all current experiments. We computed also the case of bipartite entangled systems where we found that the effect of CSL factorizes, i.e. each meson seems to be affected separately and independently of the initial state they share.
We compared the CSL model with other models [40, 50] that investigate possible decoherence effects or the stability of nonlocal correlations and that have been investigated at accelerator facilities [41–43, 51]. We want to note here, that the upper bound on the ζ parameter published by the KLOE collaboration gives us an estimate on the magnitude of the current sensitivity of the experiments. Our overall conclusion is that the possible collapse effect on these mass-superposed states is too small to be seen by the up to date performed experiments. A dedicated experiment, choosing other more suitable observables, times and with more statistics might enhance the sensitivity.
Last but not least, we want to compare the results of mesons with the ones of neutrinos (for a detailed discussion see Refs. [57, 58]). In that case one has to connect the spatiotemporal propagation with the three dimensional Hilbert space of the lepton flavor oscillations. Since the mass is much lower than in the meson case one expects that the collapse effect is also considerably smaller and thus harder to observe. Let us remark that for neutrinos, differently to mesons, the control of the environmental effects is not possible since it is given mainly by interaction with other neutrinos while traveling through our universe.
Notes
This is justified by the smallness of the CP violation effect in neutral kaons, which gives rise to a small (of the order of 10−3) odd/even CP impurity in the K S /K L states, and to a small non-orthogonality between them.
Indeed, this is not exactly true: if we take into account that kaons decay in time, there is also an exponential damping factor, besides the phase factor. We will consider this property later. Here we want to explain the basic idea behind the oscillation phenomenon.
In some of these works, inside the cosine, only the mass difference appears. This is the same result as ours, if one makes the approximation (good at the non-relativistic level) \(E_{i}^{ (j )}=m_{j}c^{2}+\frac{\mathbf {p}_{i}^{2}}{2m_{j}}\simeq m_{j}c^{2}\).
One can claim that the wavepacket observed in the laboratory is the one given by the complete evolution, taken into account also the noise, and so it is different from g(x,t) that is the wavepacket evolved with the free Hamiltonian. Anyway it is well known from the literature that the effect of the noise on the spread of the wavefunction for typical experimental times is negligible, so we can be sure that if the “real” wavepacket remains confined, the same should be valid for g(x,t).
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Acknowledgements
All authors would like to thank the COST Action MP1006 “Fundamental Problems in Quantum Physics”. The project is partly funded from the SoMoPro programme. Research of B.C.H. leading to these results has received a financial contribution from the European Community within the Seventh Framework Programme (FP/2007-2013) under Grant Agreement No. 229603. The research is also co-financed by the South Moravian Region. A.B., C.C. and S.D. wish to thank S.L. Adler for many useful and enjoyable conversations on this topic. They also acknowledges partial financial support from MIUR (PRIN 2008), INFN and the John Templeton Foundation project ‘Quantum Physics and the Nature of Reality’. B.C.H. acknowledges the Austrian Science Fund (FWF) project P21947N16.
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Appendices
Appendix A: Kaon Phenomenology
The phenomenology of oscillation and decay of meson-antimeson systems can be described by nonrelativistic quantum mechanics effectively, because the dynamics is depending on the observable hadrons rather than on the more fundamental quarks. A quantum field theoretical calculation showing negligible corrections can e.g. be found in Refs. [10, 59].
A neutral meson M 0 is a bound state of quark and antiquark. As numerous experiments have revealed the particle state M 0 and the antiparticle state \(\bar{M}_{0}\) can decay into the same final states, thus the system has to be handled as a two state system similar to spin \(\frac{1}{2}\) systems. In addition to being a decaying system these massive particles show the phenomenon of flavor oscillation, i.e. an oscillation between matter and antimatter occurs. If e.g. a neutral meson is produced at time t=0 the probability to find an antimeson at a later time is nonzero.
The most general time evolution for the two state system M 0–\(\bar{M}^{0}\) including all its decays is given by an infinite–dimensional vector in Hilbert space:
where f i denote all decay products and the state \(|\tilde{\psi }(t)\rangle\) is a solution of the Schrödinger equation (ħ≡1):
where \(\hat{H}\) is an infinite-dimensional Hamiltonian operator. There is no known method about how to solve this infinite set of coupled differential equations affected by strong dynamics. The usual procedure is based on restricting to the time evolution of the components of the flavour eigenstates, a(t) and b(t). Then one uses the Wigner–Weisskopf approximation and can write down an effective Schrödinger equation:
where |ψ〉 is a two dimensional state vector and H is a non-hermitian Hamiltonian. Any non-hermitian Hamiltonian can be written as a sum of two hermitian operators M,Γ, i.e. \(H=M+\frac {i}{2}\varGamma\), where M is the mass-operator, covering the unitary part of the evolution and the operator Γ describes the decay property. The eigenvectors and eigenvalues of the effective Schrödinger equation, we denote by:
with \(\lambda_{i}=m_{i}+\frac{i}{2} \varGamma_{i}\) (c≡1). For neutral kaons the first solution (with the lower mass) is denoted by K S , the short lived state, and the second eigenvector by K L , the long lived state, as there is a huge difference between the two decay widths Γ S ≃600Γ L . For B-mesons the lower mass solution is denoted by B L with L for light, and the second solution by B H with H for heavy. For this meson type (as for all the other ones except K-mesons) the decay widths are in good approximation equal, i.e. Γ L ≃Γ H . Thus, the huge difference in two decay widths is special to K-mesons and this is one reason that they are attractive to various foundational tests, such as e.g. tests for nonlocality [60–65] or the very working of a quantum eraser [44, 66–68].
Certainly, the state vector is not normalized for times t>0 due to the non-hermitian part of the dynamics. Different strategies have been developed to cope with that. In Ref. [47] based on the open quantum formalism the authors developed a framework that shows that the effect of decay is a kind of decoherence. In this paper we handle only the surviving part of the evolution, but given the framework developed in Ref. [47] (or similar in Ref. [69]) one can straightforwardly obtain the full quantum information content of the meson systems, e.g. to study Heisenberg’s uncertainty in relation with \(\mathcal{CP}\) violation in the time evolution [70, 71].
Appendix B: Computation of \(I_{jk}^{ (1 )} (\mathbf{p}_{i};t )\)
Let us focus our attention on the stochastic average, i.e.:
The average over the noise is:
where f(t 1−t 2) is a generic correlation function characterizing the noise. Therefore we have:
We first compute the function S:
Here we wrote explicitly the integration extremes (given by the box of side L). We make the following change of variables:
The Jacobian of this transformation is 1/23 and the integral (in the one dimensional case) changes as follows:
In our case we have:
Accordingly, the function S becomes:
In the limit L→∞ (which we will do later) the term \(\frac{1}{2^{3}}\prod_{i=1}^{3}2\frac{ (L-x_{i} )}{L}\longrightarrow1\), so we can write:
We now compute the function C(t,p f ,p i ). Let us introduce the two variables \(a\equiv\frac{1}{\hbar} (E_{f}^{ (j )}-E_{i}^{ (j )} )\) and \(b\equiv-\frac{1}{\hbar} (E_{f}^{ (k )}-E_{i}^{ (k )} )\) and so we can write
We now make the change of variables introduced when computing S; we define u=t 1+t 2 and s=t 1−t 2 and focus our attention only on the case b=−a:
In the white noise limit f(s)=δ(s) and the function C takes the very simple expression:
Collecting all pieces together, we have:
and therefore \(I_{jk}^{ (1 )} (\mathbf{p}_{i};t )\) becomes:
We now are in the position to take the limit L→∞, so that the above equation becomes:
The last integral can be computed exactly:
therefore we have:
The Gaussian function has a spread σ=ħ/r C ≃12 eV/c, which is very small compared to the typical wavelengths entering the oscillatory terms. Indeed, the modulus of the part of the exponent that depends on p f is
In the case j=k this is simply zero while for j≠k we substitute |m S −m L |≃3.5⋅10−12 MeV/c 2, m L ≃m S ≃498 MeV/c 2 [52] and, for the kaons at DAΦNE we have computed t using the maximum possible length L=10 m and taking v=0,2c so that t=L/v=1.6⋅10−7 s. Regarding the term C(t,p f ,p i ) it can be shown, starting by its definition, that it is composed of terms that involve exponential oscillation with a phase of the same order of the one above multiplied by the Fourier transform of the noise correlation function f(t). This means that, like the exponential case we studied just above, even this term changes little the Gaussian width and so we can bring all these terms outside the integral and set p f =p i . In this way, we need only compute C(t,p i ,p i ), which is the expression as given in Eq. (82) with a=−b=0. So it remains only a Gaussian integral that can be computed explicitly and we get the final result:
In the white noise case f(s)=δ(s), which we are mainly interested in, the above formula reduces to:
We can notice that this formula is consistent with the relativistic expression first derived in Ref. [58]:
since, in the non relativistic limit: \(E_{i}^{ (j )}=\sqrt {\mathbf{p}_{i}^{2}c^{2}+m_{j}^{2}c^{4}}\simeq m_{j}c^{2}\).
Appendix C: Computation of \(I_{j}^{ (2 )} (\mathbf{p}_{i};t )\)
We now compute \(I_{j}^{ (2 )} (\mathbf{p}_{i};t )\equiv\mathbb {E} [T_{j}^{ (2 )} (\mathbf{p}_{i};\mathbf {p}_{i};t ) ]\), with \(T_{j}^{ (2 )} (\mathbf {p}_{i};\mathbf{p}_{i};t )\) as given by Eq. (32). Using once more relation Eq. (73), we obtain:
The function S is the same as the one defined and computed in the previous section. The function C′ instead is slightly different from the function C previously introduced, the main difference being that in C the second integral goes from 0 to t 1, while for C′ it goes from 0 to t. As before it will be interested just in the case p i =k and, performing similar computation, one finds out that:
Going back to the definition of \(I_{j}^{ (2 )} (\mathbf {p}_{i};t )\), by taking the limit L→∞, one obtains:
where the Gaussian integral has already been computed in Appendix B. At this point, as we did in the previous section, we can make the approximation, inside the integral, C′(t,p i ,k)≃C′(t,p i ,p i ) and so we get:
that is still consistent with the relativistic result:
Appendix D: A Computation with Wave Packets
Let us start from the formula Eq. (48):
Here we want to make clear why we can neglect all the terms involving the correlation between terms in the first square bracket with terms in the second square bracket. We recall that:
If we substitute this in the second and third lines and we take only the contribution up to the second order we get:
We can see that the first and the last two lines contain pieces that involve only terms referring to the same particle (left or right). But there are also pieces containing the product of terms which refer to one particle and terms which refer to the other particle. This pieces seems unphysical, especially because they are present even if we take a separable state as the initial state. And the fact that the correlation between left terms and right terms could play an important role even for separable states sounds suspicious. Indeed this problem arises because we had oversimplified our analysis: by using plane waves as states of the particles, we are working with totally delocalized states, which is the origin of the correlation between terms of the left and the right particle. Anyway this is not what actually happens in laboratories: in such cases, the state of the system is described by wave packets well localized in space and we will show now that, with such an assumption, the suspicious pieces cancel. To do that, we have to replace this plane waves with wave packets. Therefore, in place of the two initial states |p i 〉 and |−p i 〉, we now consider:
where |f〉 (|g〉) it is a wave packet propagating in the left (right) direction. Regarding the final states, we will continue to take them as plane waves, because, as before, we will sum over them. Taken different initial states implies that the matrix element 〈K j ,p f |U j (t)|K j ,p i 〉 become:
and the same happen with the matrix element containing |g〉. Let us see how the undesired terms change, for example:
Looking at the formula for the correlation Eq. (100), we know that this term came out by taking the delta (i.e. the zero order contribution) for the bracket labeled by j′ and k and taking the first order term T (1) for the ones labeled by the index j and k′. If we take now the corresponding terms we get f ∗(p l ), g(p r ) instead of \(\delta_{\mathbf{p}_{l},\mathbf{p}_{i}}\), \(\delta_{\mathbf {p}_{r},\mathbf{p}_{i}}\) and \(\sum_{\mathbf{p}_{1}}f (\mathbf {p}_{1} )T_{j}^{ (1 )} (\mathbf{p}_{l};\mathbf {p}_{1};t_{l} )\), \(\sum_{\mathbf{p}_{2}}g^{*} (\mathbf {p}_{2} )T_{k'}^{ (1 )*} (\mathbf{p}_{r};\mathbf {p}_{2};t_{r} )\) instead of \(T_{j}^{ (1 )} (\mathbf {p}_{i};\mathbf{p}_{1};t_{l} )\), \(T_{k'}^{ (1 )*} (\mathbf{p}_{i};\mathbf{p}_{2};t_{r} )\) and so Eq. (103) is replaced by
Regarding this expression the interesting piece is:
Using Eq. (27):
We can focus our attention on the matrix elements. For example the second one is:
Now we can introduce \(\vert g,t_{2} \rangle\equiv e^{-\frac {i}{\hbar}H_{S}t_{2}}\vert g \rangle\), that is the wave packet evaluated up to the time t 2 with the free evolution. From the experiments we know that one kaon is measured on the left hand side and the other one at the right hand side. This means that the wavepackets associated to these kaons do not spread much compared to their distance from the source.Footnote 4 Now we can use the key relation:
and so:
Doing the same for the other matrix element and inserting everything in Z we get:
and using the correlation (in the white noise case) \(\mathbb {E} [w (x_{1} )w (x_{2} ) ]=\delta (t_{1}-t_{2} )\*\frac{e^{- (\mathbf{x}_{1}-\mathbf{x}_{2} )^{2}/4r_{C}^{2}}}{ (\sqrt{4\pi}r_{C} )^{3}}\):
We recall that r C =10−7 m so, apart for the starting instants, the two wave packet are always far away and the integral is small. This doesn’t happen for the terms where the correlation is taken between noise related to the same particle, because in such case we end up with terms containing pieces like f(x 1,t 1)f(x 2,t 1) or g(x 1,t 1)g(x 2,t 1) inside the integrals, that gives an important contribution even for large time.
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Donadi, S., Bassi, A., Curceanu, C. et al. Are Collapse Models Testable via Flavor Oscillations?. Found Phys 43, 813–844 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10701-013-9720-x
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10701-013-9720-x