1. Introduction
Many, perhaps all, the difficulties in the study of space and of time can be traced to their invisibility. We do not see space; we see matter in space. We do not see time; we see changes in things. Although these studies have resulted in an increased understanding of the properties of matter in space–time the problem remains that it is not always clear how to disentangle which properties should be attributed to matter and which to space. Newton managed to evade the issue and created a successful science of mechanics but only at the cost of adopting an absolute concept of motion relative to an abstract “mathematical” space and time. Leibniz objected that such absolute positions would not be observable and therefore not real. Instead, he advocated for a concept of motion defined in terms of the observable relative distances. Newton had, however, a definite dynamical theory to back him up, while Leibniz had no such support. As a result Newton won the day, and the relational argument lay largely dormant for almost two centuries until revived by Mach and specially by Einstein. In the latter decades of the 20th century, as a stepping stone towards a quantum theory of gravity, the thrust towards a fully relational dynamics was once again resumed in the form of Hamiltonian formulations of general relativity [
1,
2,
3,
4]. More recently, the understanding of relational motion achieved a certain level of completion—at least within the context of classical physics—with the explicitly Machian line of research that originates with J. Barbour and B. Bertotti [
5,
6,
7].
Barbour and Bertotti’s basic insight [
5] was that a formulation in terms of the relative interparticle distances is not practical. Instead, one should focus attention on the fact that two configurations that differ by arbitrary rigid (i.e., global) displacements and/or rigid rotations describe exactly the same physical situation. Thus, in formulating a relational dynamics, whatever measure one adopts to quantify the change from one configuration to the next, the actual intrinsic change should remain unaffected by independent rigid shifts and rotations of each configuration. This is achieved through a technique Barbour and Bertotti called “best matching” (BM). The idea is to introduce a quantitative measure of the “mismatch” between two successive configurations and then shift and rotate one configuration
relative to the other to find the location that minimizes the mismatch. Thus, motion is not defined as relative to an absolute space, but relative to the earlier state of the system itself. Barbour and Bertotti’s intrinsic change and best matching have added an interesting twist: what is relational is not the notion of space but the notion of change.
With Quantum Mechanics (QM), however, new problems arise. In its standard Copenhagen interpretation QM is manifestly non-relational. It lives in Newton’s absolute space and time, or at best, in Minkowski’s absolute space–time, and its particles do not have definite positions, much less definite relative distances. But then the interpretations of QM have always been a source of controversy and many have been proposed. One approach inspired by Barbour and Bertotti is due to Gryb [
8]. Another relevant example, Rovelli’s relational interpretation, is tailored to formulating a background-independent quantum theory of gravity [
9,
10]. We shall follow a different path. First, however, we must clarify a potential confusion between this line of research and the different line of research by the same name pursued by Rovelli and collaborators (see [
9,
11]). As we pointed out above, we use the term “relational” in a sense that can be traced historically in the 18th century back to Newton and Leibniz and the Leibniz–Clarke correspondence. In later times, it can be traced through Mach, Einstein, and finally to the modern Barbour–Bertotti version. Our contribution is to provide a quantum version of this historical evolution. It is this history that extends through several centuries that justifies our use of the name ‘Relational Quantum Mechanics’ as appropriate. The name has also been adopted by Rovelli and collaborators in the very different context of quantum measurement and of correlations among observables. Their line of research has little to do with the subject of this paper.
Our goal here is to formulate a non-relativistic relational QM within the framework of Entropic Dynamics (ED) [
12,
13]. Entropic Dynamics is a subject within the subfield of theoretical physics that is currently called Foundations of Physics. Its goal is to derive or “reconstruct” the standard formalism of QM and to resolve the longstanding conceptual problems (wave–particle duality, the measurement problem, the ontic vs. the epistemic interpretation of the wave function, wave function collapse, etc.) that have plagued QM since its origin.
The mathematical formalism is derived using well-established tools and principles of inference—probabilities, entropies, and information geometry. (For a pedagogical review see [
14]). With regard to interpretation, one appealing feature is that ED achieves a clear separation between the epistemic and the ontic elements. This allows ED to solve the measurement problem while evading the no-go theorems that afflict other realist
-epistemic interpretations [
15]. ED is a conservative theory in that it grants a definite ontic status to things such as the positions of particles—they have definite values at all times—and grants a definite epistemic status to probabilities and wave functions without invoking exotic quantum probabilities. In contrast, ED is radically non-classical in that there is no ontic dynamics; ED is a purely epistemic dynamics of probabilities.
As a method of quantization, ED is singled out in that it does not rely on the prior formulation of a classical dynamics to which one must append some ad hoc quantization rules; therefore, there are no operator-ordering ambiguities, because there are no operators. In the present context, one does not first formulate a classical Machian dynamics à la Barbour–Bertotti with a corresponding classical criterion for best matching. Instead, one directly formulates a quantum theory with its corresponding quantum best matching criterion (BM) based on the natural geometrical tools available to ED, namely, information and symplectic geometry which lead, eventually, to the Hilbert space inner product.
Some of Barbour and Bertotti’s ideas can be readily adapted and imported into the ED framework. In an earlier work towards a relational ED [
16], some of the conceptual issues were successfully settled: in a dynamics of probabilities, it should come as no surprise that the configurations to be compared involve probability distributions. A second crucial question is the particular choice of mismatch measure. In the classical context, the measure adopted by Barbour and Bertotti was borrowed from Jacobi’s classical action principle and amounts to a variation on a least-squares mismatch [
5]. In [
16], a mismatch measure based on information geometry was adopted which was natural in the probabilistic context but, unfortunately, that measure proved less than satisfactory in practice. In the meantime, further formal developments in the ED reconstruction of QM [
13] have shown that the geometrical structures relevant to QM involve not just information geometry but also symplectic geometry. Here, we deploy the recent development of ED as Hamilton–Killing flows and propose a quantum BM criterion to derive a relational QM of particles.
Our present concern with a non-relativistic relational QM implies that the resulting theory will necessarily exhibit some still provisional and therefore unsatisfactory features. Thus, what we produce here are toy models that will allow us to ask questions and test ideas that will prove useful in the construction of more realistic relativistic theories.
One such question is what we mean by “relational”. The idea behind absolute space and time is that these structures exist independently of matter. In contrast, in a fully relational approach all assertions about space and time are to be ultimately interpreted as assertions about relations involving matter and the relevant probabilities and wave functions.
Another question is about the nature of those relations: with respect to what transformations is the theory supposed to be relational? In a more realistic model that includes quantum fields and gravity, one might expect the transformations in question to include local diffeomorphisms. Here, in a non-relativistic setting, we shall be more modest and include only rigid translations and rotations. Our models will, therefore, be only partially relational; they will retain some absolute structures including absolute simultaneity and the Euclidean geometry of space.
We will argue that as previously formulated ED is already temporally relational. One goal is to make this feature more explicit and, having done so, to formulate a non-relativistic quantum model that is generally covariant with respect to time. This toy model exemplifies a strategy that successfully evades the notorious “problem of time” in quantum gravity [
17,
18]. Briefly, the “problem of time” arises in the canonical quantization of gravity because in any generally covariant theory the physical quantum states are constrained to be annihilated by the quantum Hamiltonian,
. Thus, the analogue of the Schrödinger equation—the Wheeler–DeWitt equation—implies that physical states cannot evolve and that nothing ever happens.
Here, once again, we wish to avoid the misunderstandings that might arise from confusion with another approach to dynamics due to Page and Wootters [
19] who proposed a
timeless picture of quantum dynamics. Their approach to time is instrumentalist: time is what is measured by a clock. Their universe consists of two systems, one being the system of interest and the other a clock, and it is assumed to be in a stationary state—thus, the
timeless picture. Dynamics consists of tracking the correlations due to entanglement between the system and the clock. (For a pedagogical treatment with more recent references, see [
20]). As we shall see below, relational time in the ED approach differs in several crucial ways. For example, our universe is not necessarily in a stationary state and there are no external clocks. Furthermore, as one might expect in an
entropic dynamics, there is a natural arrow of time, even though invariance under time reversal need not be violated.
In
Section 2, as a preliminary to defining a spatially relational ED, we establish the subject matter—the ontic microstates—and define the concept of intrinsic change. The ED of intrinsic change is formulated in
Section 3 where we emphasize that the notion of entropic time associated to ED is already relational in the sense that the clock that defines entropic time is the quantum system itself—there are neither external clocks nor an absolute external time. In
Section 4, we formulate the quantum criterion for best matching using the natural geometric tools available to ED. In
Section 4.1, we construct a QM model that is relational with respect to rigid translations, and then in
Section 4.2 a QM model that is relational with respect to both rigid translations and rotations. In
Section 5, we pursue formal developments: we write the relational QM models in terms of a Hamiltonian action principle. Then, in order to make the temporal relationality more explicit we rewrite our ED models in a form that is “generally covariant”. The procedure is well known from the canonical formulation of general relativity and results in a “parametrized ED” [
21,
22]. Our quantum toy model serves to illustrate how the ED approach evades the notorious problem of time that afflicts the canonical quantization of gravity. Finally, in
Section 6 we summarize our conclusions.
4. A Quantum Criterion for Best Matching
There are two foundational pillars of the ED approach to QM: one refers to kinematics, the other to dynamics. The former is the kinematic concept of Hamilton–Killing flows, Equation (
46), based on the information metric and symplectic tensors. The latter is the explanation of the dynamics of probabilities as a form of entropic updating described in
Section 3. It is only natural to expect that, in its ED version, the logic of quantum best matching (BM) will also involve the same two tensors
G and
. Consider two states
and
X; in wave function coordinates,
where the discrete index
stands for
and its momentum
, respectively. From
and
G, Equations (
38) and (
45), we define the inner product (see [
13,
14]) of
and
by
Our goal is to find the shift
so that the state
is best matched relative to the slightly earlier state
. The strategy is to minimize an appropriate measure of the mismatch between
and
. We assume that the states
and
are normalized and that
is obtained by time-evolving
using the Hamiltonian
, Equations (
47) and (
48). We propose the following candidate for a measure of mismatch,
Then, the BM shift
is found by minimizing the measure
. Other mismatch measures are in principle possible, but
recommends itself because
(a) it involves geometric structures (
and
G) that are natural to QM,
(b) it obeys the natural limiting condition of vanishing as
so that
is best matched relative to itself,
(c) one can check that
does have a minimum and, most importantly,
(d) is useful and convenient in actual practice. Equation (
54) can be written in a more convenient form using
Then, we find
or,
Next, we analyze the consequences of minimizing the mismatch
.
4.1. Best Matching Under Rigid Translations
In this section, we formulate a QM model that is relational with respect to rigid translations. Minimizing (
57) with
given by (
48) and
,
yields
where
. Therefore, the optimal shift is given by
where the (expected) total momentum,
is the generator of global translations. The interpretation is straightforward. If we are given a sequence of consecutive states, the shift velocity
that achieves equilocality is given by the expected velocity of the center of mass.
Conversely, to formulate a relational dynamics with evolution given by (
48) with
chosen to achieve best matching, we must impose that
be a constant in time and require that solutions be constrained to the subspace of the full Hilbert space with a given total momentum,
This completes our formulation of an ED model that is relational relative to the rigid translations ST2, but we can can go a bit further.
The Galilean transformations ST4, Equation (
4), allow us to describe the system in the center of mass frame, that is,
, which means that every state is best matched relative to the previous one and spatial points with the same
coordinates are equilocal. The corresponding Hamiltonian, Equation (
48), is
and quantum states
are restricted to the subspace constrained by
We conclude by noting that BM imposes expected value constraints. In the standard approach to quantizing theories with constraints, questions arise as to whether the constraints of the classical theory should, after quantization, be imposed on the ontic microstates, on the operators, on the quantum states, or on expectation values. The ED approach to BM provides a crisp answer: the quantum constraints that express relationality are to be imposed on expectation values.
4.2. Best Matching Under Rigid Translations and Rotations
In this section, we formulate a QM model that is relational with respect to the ST3 transformations of both rigid translations and rotations,
. For simplicity, we shall assume that relationality with respect to translations has already been imposed; the system is described in the center of mass frame,
, and quantum states are constrained by (
64). Then,
and the best matching condition (
54) is written as
Substituting
from by (
48), after some straightforward algebra, we find
The first integral on the right is recognized as the (expected) total angular momentum,
Substituting
into the second integral,
and using the identity
, we find
where
is recognized as the moment of inertia tensor and the functional
is its expected value. Combining (
66) and (
68), we find
The interpretation is that if we are given a sequence of consecutive states, the shift angular velocity
that achieves minimal mismatch with respect to rotations is given by the expected angular velocity of the system,
Thus, in the center of mass frame (
) rotational relationality is implemented through a BM constraint that restricts solutions to the subspace of the full Hilbert space with a conserved expected total momentum given by
In conclusion, to formulate a relational dynamics with evolution given by (
48) with
chosen to achieve best matching, then we must require that solutions be constrained to the subspace of the full Hilbert space with total momentum and total angular momentum given by
This completes our formulation of an ED model that is relational relative to the rigid translations and rotations ST3.
So far, the situation seems closely analogous to the case of translations but in fact it is substantially different. While momentum conservation implies that the center of mass velocity must be constant in time, the conservation of angular momentum does not imply that the angular velocity is constant because the system is not a rigid body and the moment of inertia is not constant in time. Obvious exceptions are those states for which . Furthermore, if we want a dynamics that is relational with respect to rotations then we ought to be able to transform to a rotating frame, but this is not a symmetry, at least not obviously so: one cannot just transform to a rotating frame and not expect the appearance of centrifugal forces. We meet here the quantum analogue of Newton’s bucket. The elegant way out of this quandary has been known for a long time. The resolution is via Einstein’s equivalence principle: one can formulate a dynamics that is relational with respect to rotations provided the centrifugal forces are interpreted as radial gravitational forces. From this broadened perspective, what is rotationally relational is not the system of particles by themselves, but the composite system of particles plus the gravitational field. This topic obviously deserves a more detailed study but its pursuit would take us beyond the more limited goals of this paper. Its further exploration will be taken up elsewhere.
6. Conclusions
The ED approach to QM has been extended to formulate non-relativistic quantum models that are spatially relational with respect to rigid translations and rotations. Although only partially relational—absolute structures of simultaneity and Euclidean geometry are retained—our models still provide a useful testing ground for ideas that will prove useful in the context of more realistic relativistic theories.
The fact that within ED the positions of particles are meant to be ontic with definite values at all times, just as in classical mechanics, has allowed us to adapt and adopt some intuitions from Barbour and Bertotti’s classical framework. Nevertheless, the two frameworks are very different. Their classical measure of mismatch compares ontic particle configurations and is based on Jacobi’s action. In contrast, our quantum measure of mismatch compares epistemic quantum states and is adapted to the metric and symplectic structures of the epistemic phase space.
The case of a single particle serves to illustrate the difference. While it makes no sense to consider the relational classical motion of a single particle, in the quantum case a relational dynamics makes sense even for a single particle because what are being best matched are infinite dimensional wave functions.
We have shown that even in its previous formulations ED was already temporally relational. Here, we made this feature explicit and, as an example of a development that might prove valuable in the context of quantum gravity, the non-relativistic quantum model was rewritten in generally covariant form. This toy model shows that the ED approach evades the analogue of what in quantum gravity has been called the problem of time.
Finally, we note that the relational ED framework developed here can be applied beyond the example of particles. It is expected to apply to any model with redundancy in description, and this potentially includes all fundamental theories such as electromagnetism, Yang–Mills theories and, possibly, gravity.