75 Years of Matter Wave: Louis de Broglie and Renaissance of the Causally Complete Knowledge
Nov, 1999Citations per year
Abstract: (arXiv)
A physically real wave associated with any moving particle and travelling in a surrounding material medium was introduced by Louis de Broglie in a series of short notes in 1923 and in a more complete form in his thesis defended in Paris on the 25th November 1924. This result, recognised by the Nobel Prize in 1929, gave rise to a major direction of "new physics" known today as "quantum mechanics". However, although such notions as "de Broglie wavelength" and "wave-particle duality" form the basis of the standard quantum theory, it actually only takes for granted (postulates) the formula for the particle wavelength and totally ignores the underlying causal, realistic and physically transparent picture of wave-particle dynamics outlined by Louis de Broglie in his thesis and further considerably developed in his later works, in the form of "double solution" and "hidden thermodynamics" theory. A price to pay for such rough deviation from the original de Broglian realism and consistency involves fundamental physics domination by purely abstract and mechanistically simplified schemes of formal symbols and rules that have led to a deep knowledge impasse justly described as "the end of science". However, a new, independent approach of "quantum field mechanics" (quant-ph/9902015, quant-ph/9902016, physics/0401164) created within the "universal science of complexity" (physics/9806002) provides many-sided confirmation and natural completion of de Broglie's "nonlinear wave mechanics", eliminating all its "difficult points" and reconstituting the causally complete, totally consistent and intrinsically unified picture of the real, complex micro-world dynamics directly extendible to all higher levels of unreduced world complexity.Note:
- 28 pages, 25 eqs, 47 refs; Dedicated to the 75th Anniversary of matter wave appearance in the Ph.D. thesis defended by Louis de Broglie in Paris 25 November 1924; Reviews a part of the author's book "Universal Concept of Complexity by the Dynamic Redundance Paradigm: Causal Randomness, Complete Wave Mechanics, and the Ultimate Unification of Knowledge" (Kyiv, Naukova Dumka, 1997 ; in English), see physics/9806002; new text format, stylistic corrections in v2 •
- Reviews a part of the author's book 'Universal Concept of Complexity by the Dynamic Redundance Paradigm: Casual Randomness, Complete Wave Mechanics, and the Ultimate Unification of Knowledge' (Kiev, Naukova Dumka, 1997, 550p. in English)
- quantum mechanics
- causality
- interaction
- unitarity
- duality
- relativity theory
- bibliography
References(64)
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