| ²é¿´: 1900 | »Ø¸´: 8 | |||
| µ±Ç°Ö»ÏÔʾÂú×ãÖ¸¶¨Ìõ¼þµÄ»ØÌû£¬µã»÷ÕâÀï²é¿´±¾»°ÌâµÄËùÓлØÌû | |||
physsͳæ (СÓÐÃûÆø)
|
[½»Á÷]
¹ØÓÚÁ¿×ÓËúËõ£¨quantum collapse£©£¬´ó¼ÒÊÇÔõôÀí½âµÄ£¬ÏÖÔÚ×îеÄÑо¿ÊÇÔõÑùµÄ°¡£¿ ÒÑÓÐ6È˲ÎÓë
|
||
| ÏÖÔÚÕâ¸öÎÊÌâ±»ºÜºÃµÄ½â¾öÁËÂ𣿠|
» ²ÂÄãϲ»¶
Çó¸ö²©µ¼¿´¿´
ÒѾÓÐ12È˻ظ´
ÉϺ£¹¤³Ì¼¼Êõ´óѧÕÅÅàÀÚ½ÌÊÚÍŶÓÕÐÊÕ²©Ê¿Éú
ÒѾÓÐ3È˻ظ´
ÉϺ£¹¤³Ì¼¼Êõ´óѧ¡¾¼¤¹âÖÇÄÜÖÆÔì¡¿¿ÎÌâ×éÕÐÊÕ˶ʿ
ÒѾÓÐ5È˻ظ´
ÇóÖúԺʿÃÇ£¬Õâ¸öÈçºÎºÏ³Éѽ
ÒѾÓÐ4È˻ظ´
ÁÙ¸ÛʵÑéÊÒÓëÉϿƴóÁªÅ಩ʿÕÐÉú1Ãû
ÒѾÓÐ9È˻ظ´
Ïë»»¹¤×÷¡£´ó¶àÊý¸ßУ¶¼ÊÇ ÆÀÖ°³ÆÊ± ÈÏ¿É5ÄêÄÚÔÚÔµ¥Î»È¡µÃµÄ³É¹ûÂð£¿
ÒѾÓÐ7È˻ظ´
ÐèÒªºÏ³É515-64-0£¬50g£¬Äܽӵ¥µÄÁôÑÔ
ÒѾÓÐ4È˻ظ´
×Ô¼ö¶Á²©
ÒѾÓÐ4È˻ظ´
дÁËһƪ¡°Ïà±ä´¢Äܼ¼ÊõÔÚÀä¿âÖÐÓ¦Óá±µÄÂÛÎÄ£¬ÂÛÎÄÄÚÈÝÒÔʵÑéΪÖ÷£¬Í¶Ê²Ã´ÆÚ¿¯ºÏÊÊ£¿
ÒѾÓÐ6È˻ظ´
´ø×ʽø×éÇ󲩵¼ÊÕÁô
ÒѾÓÐ10È˻ظ´
» ±¾Ö÷ÌâÏà¹Ø¼ÛÖµÌùÍÆ¼ö£¬¶ÔÄúͬÑùÓаïÖú:
Á¿×ÓÁ¦Ñ§ÖйØÓÚ¸ÅÂʲ¨µÄÀí½â
ÒѾÓÐ9È˻ظ´
×Ô¼º×ܽáµÄ¹ØÓÚï®Àë×Óµç³ØµÄ»ù´¡ÖªÊ¶¼°Ñо¿ÏÖ×´
ÒѾÓÐ894È˻ظ´
ÏÖÔÚÌ«ÑôÄÜµç³Ø×î´óЧÂÊ£¿¸÷É«OLEDµÄ×îÐÂÍâÁ¿×ÓЧÂÊ£¿
ÒѾÓÐ22È˻ظ´
¹ØÓÚÒ»¸öÓ¢ÎÄËõдµÄ·Ò룡
ÒѾÓÐ4È˻ظ´
¹ØÓÚÁ¿×ÓµÄÒ»µãµãÌå»á£¬´ó¼Ò¿´¿´¾õµÃ¶ÔÂð£¿
ÒѾÓÐ20È˻ظ´
ÔõÑùÀí½âÄÜ´ø±ä¿í£¬¹â´ß»¯·´Ó¦Á¿×Ó²úÂÊÌá¸ß£¿
ÒѾÓÐ12È˻ظ´
ÎÒµÄרҵÊÇ»¯¹¤£¬½á¹ûÏÖÔÚ×öµÄ¿ÎÌâÈ´ÓëÁ¿×Ó»¯Ñ§Óйأ¬Ôõô°ì£¿
ÒѾÓÐ16È˻ظ´
¡¾ÇóÖú¡¿ÈõÎÊÒ»ÏÂgaussian03Êä³ö½á¹ûÖÐÕâЩËõдµÄº¬Ò壬лл£¡
ÒѾÓÐ5È˻ظ´
Ëï?ª730
ÖÁ×ðľ³æ (ÖªÃû×÷¼Ò)
- ÎïÀíEPI: 7
- Ó¦Öú: 537 (²©Ê¿)
- ¹ó±ö: 0.961
- ½ð±Ò: 22929.7
- É¢½ð: 6464
- ºì»¨: 177
- ɳ·¢: 16
- Ìû×Ó: 8217
- ÔÚÏß: 2897.2Сʱ
- ³æºÅ: 490447
- ×¢²á: 2008-01-03

4Â¥2011-10-04 13:01:57
janecool
Ìú¸Ëľ³æ (ÖøÃûдÊÖ)
- ÎïÀíEPI: 1
- Ó¦Öú: 54 (³õÖÐÉú)
- ¹ó±ö: 0.006
- ½ð±Ò: 5996.2
- É¢½ð: 342
- ºì»¨: 12
- Ìû×Ó: 2070
- ÔÚÏß: 626.6Сʱ
- ³æºÅ: 830148
- ×¢²á: 2009-08-18
- ÐÔ±ð: GG
- רҵ: Á£×ÓÎïÀíѧºÍ³¡ÂÛ
¡ï
Сľ³æ(½ð±Ò+0.5):¸ø¸öºì°ü£¬Ð»Ð»»ØÌû
Сľ³æ(½ð±Ò+0.5):¸ø¸öºì°ü£¬Ð»Ð»»ØÌû
|
In quantum mechanics, wave function collapse (also called collapse of the state vector or reduction of the wave packet) is the phenomenon in which a wave function¡ªinitially in a superposition of several different possible eigenstates¡ªappears to reduce to a single one of those states after interaction with an observer. In simplified terms, it is the reduction of the physical possibilities into a single possibility as seen by an observer. It is one of two processes by which quantum systems evolve in time, according to the laws of quantum mechanics as presented by John von Neumann.[1] The reality of wave function collapse has always been debatable, i.e., whether it is a fundamental physical phenomenon in its own right or just an epiphenomenon of another process, such as quantum decoherence.[2] In recent decades the quantum decoherence view has gained popularity.[citation needed] Collapse may be understood as an update in a probabilistic model, given the observed result. |

2Â¥2011-10-04 09:34:21
physs
ͳæ (СÓÐÃûÆø)
- Ó¦Öú: 0 (Ó×¶ùÔ°)
- ½ð±Ò: 59
- Ìû×Ó: 62
- ÔÚÏß: 41.8Сʱ
- ³æºÅ: 1109820
- ×¢²á: 2010-09-28
- רҵ: »ù´¡ÎïÀíѧ
3Â¥2011-10-04 12:52:15
¹·Æ¨¹·
ͳæ (ÕýʽдÊÖ)
- Ó¦Öú: 12 (СѧÉú)
- ½ð±Ò: 196.8
- É¢½ð: 220
- Ìû×Ó: 346
- ÔÚÏß: 43.5Сʱ
- ³æºÅ: 1334651
- ×¢²á: 2011-06-30
5Â¥2011-10-04 15:31:45







»Ø¸´´ËÂ¥