I asked GPT5, which just came out yesterday, the following question:
"How would Everett's Many World's idea explain the way the two slit experiment works and the key role that "which way" information plays in it?"
And this is what he she or it said:
==============
Okay- let's put on our Everett hat and walk through the two-slit experiment step by step, with the “many worlds” interpretation (MWI) in mind.
In Everett’s picture, the wavefunction is real and never collapses.
Instead of “the particle chooses a path when you measure,” all possible outcomes actually happen — but in different, non-communicating branches of reality.
The key: the Schrödinger equation rules everything, all the time. No special “measurement” magic, just physics.
Imagine you have a photon heading toward two slits.
Before the slits:
The photon’s wavefunction spreads so it has an amplitude to go through slit A and an amplitude to go through slit B.
In MWI terms, there’s still just one “world,” but in that world the photon is in a superposition of both paths.
After the slits:
These two path components overlap and interfere, producing the interference pattern on the detection screen.
Since there’s no device or environmental disturbance storing “which-way” info, the two parts of the wavefunction can still affect each other.
In MWI language: there is no branching here — both possibilities are still part of one combined world and can interfere.
Now add a detector at the slits that becomes correlated with the photon’s path.
If the photon goes through slit A → detector state changes to “A detected.”
If through slit B → detector state changes to “B detected.”
Everett’s take:
This doesn’t collapse the photon’s wavefunction — instead, the photon + detector become entangled.
The total wavefunction now has two components:
Branch 1: Photon through A + Detector says “A”
Branch 2: Photon through B + Detector says “B”
These are different worlds: in one, the detector reads “A”; in the other, “B.”
Because the detector states are physically different and don’t overlap, the photon’s A-path wave and B-path wave can no longer interfere — they “live” in separate worlds.
From the MWI perspective:
No which-way info: The two paths are in the same world and can interfere.
Which-way info exists (even if nobody looks at it): The environment has branched into distinct versions, each containing only one path. Interference requires the waves to be in the same branch, so once branching occurs, interference is gone.
This matches decoherence: the environment records path info, which makes branches orthogonal (no overlap → no interference).
In Many Worlds, nothing ever really collapses. What we call “measurement” is just branching into non-communicating worlds.
The two-slit experiment is then:
No measurement → no branching → interference visible.
Measurement → branching → no interference between branches.
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> So did you ask it how MWI deals with continuous splitting, as in detecting the decay of radioactive atoms?
On Fri, Aug 8, 2025 at 4:57 PM Brent Meeker <meeke...@gmail.com> wrote:
> So did you ask it how MWI deals with continuous splitting, as in detecting the decay of radioactive atoms?
No I did not. However on November 17, 2024 I sent the following to this list that was about Many Worlds and radioactive decay:======================
Suppose an atom has a half-life of one second and I'm watching it, the universe splits and so do I after one second. In one universe the atom decays and I observed that the atom has decayed, in the other universe the atom has not decayed and I observed that it has not decayed.
In the universe where the atom didn't decay after another second the universe splits again, and again in one universe it decays but in the other it has not, it survived for 2 full seconds. So there will be a version of me that observes this atom, which has a one second half-life, surviving for 3 seconds, and 4 seconds, and 5 years, and 6 centuries, and you name it.
>> Suppose an atom has a half-life of one second and I'm watching it, the universe splits and so do I after one second. In one universe the atom decays and I observed that the atom has decayed, in the other universe the atom has not decayed and I observed that it has not decayed.
In the universe where the atom didn't decay after another second the universe splits again, and again in one universe it decays but in the other it has not, it survived for 2 full seconds. So there will be a version of me that observes this atom, which has a one second half-life, surviving for 3 seconds, and 4 seconds, and 5 years, and 6 centuries, and you name it.
> And in fact for every value of t>0 in R.
>Another fanciful result of MWI.
> And all just to avoid dealing with a definite result.
On Fri, Aug 8, 2025 at 10:23 PM Brent Meeker <meeke...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> Suppose an atom has a half-life of one second and I'm watching it, the universe splits and so do I after one second. In one universe the atom decays and I observed that the atom has decayed, in the other universe the atom has not decayed and I observed that it has not decayed.
In the universe where the atom didn't decay after another second the universe splits again, and again in one universe it decays but in the other it has not, it survived for 2 full seconds. So there will be a version of me that observes this atom, which has a one second half-life, surviving for 3 seconds, and 4 seconds, and 5 years, and 6 centuries, and you name it.
> And in fact for every value of t>0 in R.
Yep.
>Another fanciful result of MWI.
What I have described in the above that was, as you say, obtained as a result of MWI, is called the "Quantum Zeno Effect" and it is NOT fanciful, in 1990 it was CONFIRMED EXPERIMENTALLY to exist.
"By utilizing a series of increasingly complex and difficult procedures it is possible for the lab (and you) to be in the universe that contains labs and versions of you that see the atom surviving for an arbitrarily long length of time. But the longer the time past its half-life the more splits are involved,
and the more difficult the experiment becomes. Soon it becomes ridiculously impractical to go further, but it's not impossible."
> And all just to avoid dealing with a definite result.
Definite result? All radioactive atoms seem to have a definite half-life
that you can look up in any physics textbook,
>> Me: Suppose an atom has a half-life of one second and I'm watching it, the universe splits and so do I after one second. In one universe the atom decays and I observed that the atom has decayed, in the other universe the atom has not decayed and I observed that it has not decayed.
In the universe where the atom didn't decay after another second the universe splits again, and again in one universe it decays but in the other it has not, it survived for 2 full seconds. So there will be a version of me that observes this atom, which has a one second half-life, surviving for 3 seconds, and 4 seconds, and 5 years, and 6 centuries, and you name it.
>Another fanciful result of MWI.
> Me: What I have described in the above that was, as you say, obtained as a result of MWI, is called the "Quantum Zeno Effect" and it is NOT fanciful, in 1990 it was CONFIRMED EXPERIMENTALLY to exist.
> And the quantum Zeno effect is about atoms NOT decaying.
> There is no experimental support for a continuum branching of worlds, that's what is fanciful.
> I don't know why you tried to change the question to on of NOT decaying.
>> "By utilizing a series of increasingly complex and difficult procedures it is possible for the lab (and you) to be in the universe that contains labs and versions of you that see the atom surviving for an arbitrarily long length of time. But the longer the time past its half-life the more splits are involved,> Independent of the time past or the value of the half-life the number of splits, according to MWI, is the same as the number of points on a line, i.e. infinite.
On Sat, Aug 9, 2025 at 3:51 PM Brent Meeker <meeke...@gmail.com> wrote:
We've been over this many many times before as I'm sure you remember, and yet you STILL bring out that same silly argument even though you must know by now it's invalid.
1) Many Worlds does NOT insist that the number of worlds is equal to the number of points in a line.2) Many Worlds does NOT insist that the number of worlds is equal to the number of countable integers.3) Many Worlds does NOT insist that the number of worlds is an infinite number at all.
>> We've been over this many many times before as I'm sure you remember, and yet you STILL bring out that same silly argument even though you must know by now it's invalid.
> Then explain it, instead of just asserting it.
> Do you have a reference?
>> 1) Many Worlds does NOT insist that the number of worlds is equal to the number of points in a line.
2) Many Worlds does NOT insist that the number of worlds is equal to the number of countable integers.
3) Many Worlds does NOT insist that the number of worlds is an infinite number at all.
> So you say.
>But it is an implication of the fact that the probability of decay per unit time is constant.
On Sun, Aug 10, 2025 at 12:52 AM Brent Meeker <meeke...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Do you have a reference?
Try "Something Deeply Hidden" by Sean Carroll, it's a wonderful book, one of the best I've ever read and I read a lot. You can get it on Amazon:
> Do you have a reference?
Try "Something Deeply Hidden" by Sean Carroll, it's a wonderful book, one of the best I've ever read and I read a lot. You can get it on Amazon:
> I read it when it first came out. He doesn't address the question of continuous time implying a continuum of worlds.