dorsal/arxiv
View SchemaThe cosmic origin of quantum mechanics
| Authors | Ding-Yu Chung |
|---|---|
| Categories | |
| ArXiv ID | physics/0101064 |
| URL | https://arxiv.org/abs/physics/0101064 |
Abstract
In this paper, the base of quantum mechanics is the spontaneous tendency for a microscopic object to fractionalize instantly into quasistates and condense instantly quasistates. This quasistate is equivalent to the eigenfunction. An object with the fractionalization-condensation is equivalent to the unitary wavefunction. Nonlocal operation is explicitly required to maintain communication among all quasistates regardless of distance during the fractionalization process. Interference effect is explicitly required for the condensation of quasistates. The collapse of the fractionalization-condensation is explicitly required when the fractionalization-condensation is disrupted. The cosmic origin of quantum mechanics is derived from the cyclic fractionalization-condensation in the cyclic universe, consisting of the unobservable cosmic vacuum and the observable universe. The cyclic fractionalization-condensation allows quasistates to appear cyclically rather than simultaneously. The cosmic vacuum involves the gradual cyclic fractionalization-condensation between the high energy eleven dimensional and low energy four dimensional spacetime. The observable universe involves the drastic cyclic fractionalization-condensation consisting of the cosmic instant fractionalization (the big bang) into various dimensional particles and the expansion-contraction by mostly cosmic radiation and gravity. The cosmic instant fractionalization leads to the microscopic instant fractionalization-condensation (the standard quantum mechanics) that allows all quasistates from an object to appear simultaneously.
{
"annotation_id": "8cc1e8dc-299a-4b1c-8222-69738cc9a7c2",
"date_created": "2026-03-02T18:00:32.290000Z",
"date_modified": "2026-03-02T18:00:32.290000Z",
"file_hash": "4bd568220014112c2166ea67e620e040f7c9746aba377aa8c20a468cf95d623c",
"private": false,
"record": {
"abstract": "In this paper, the base of quantum mechanics is the spontaneous tendency for\na microscopic object to fractionalize instantly into quasistates and condense\ninstantly quasistates. This quasistate is equivalent to the eigenfunction. An\nobject with the fractionalization-condensation is equivalent to the unitary\nwavefunction. Nonlocal operation is explicitly required to maintain\ncommunication among all quasistates regardless of distance during the\nfractionalization process. Interference effect is explicitly required for the\ncondensation of quasistates. The collapse of the fractionalization-condensation\nis explicitly required when the fractionalization-condensation is disrupted.\nThe cosmic origin of quantum mechanics is derived from the cyclic\nfractionalization-condensation in the cyclic universe, consisting of the\nunobservable cosmic vacuum and the observable universe. The cyclic\nfractionalization-condensation allows quasistates to appear cyclically rather\nthan simultaneously. The cosmic vacuum involves the gradual cyclic\nfractionalization-condensation between the high energy eleven dimensional and\nlow energy four dimensional spacetime. The observable universe involves the\ndrastic cyclic fractionalization-condensation consisting of the cosmic instant\nfractionalization (the big bang) into various dimensional particles and the\nexpansion-contraction by mostly cosmic radiation and gravity. The cosmic\ninstant fractionalization leads to the microscopic instant\nfractionalization-condensation (the standard quantum mechanics) that allows all\nquasistates from an object to appear simultaneously.",
"arxiv_id": "physics/0101064",
"authors": [
"Ding-Yu Chung"
],
"categories": [
"physics.gen-ph"
],
"title": "The cosmic origin of quantum mechanics",
"url": "https://arxiv.org/abs/physics/0101064"
},
"schema_id": "dorsal/arxiv",
"source": {
"execution_id": "e6482bd2-c7d5-48c0-adf7-2334c2740779",
"id": "arXiv Dataset IDs",
"type": "Model",
"variant": "snapshot-2026-03-01",
"version": "0.1.0"
},
"user_id": 1000002
}