The Fabric of Reality David Deutch


particles. Because of the phenomenon of interference, they are not


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The Fabric of Reality


particles. Because of the phenomenon of interference, they are not 
wholly
partitioned off from the rest of reality (that is, from the shadow particles). If
they were, we should never have discovered that there is more to reality
than tangible particles. But to a good approximation they do resemble the
universe that we see around us in everyday life, and the universe referred to
in classical (pre-quantum) physics.
For similar reasons, we might think of calling the shadow particles,
collectively, a 
parallel universe, for they too are affected by tangible particles
only through interference phenomena. But we can do better than that. For it
turns out that shadow particles are partitioned among themselves in exactly
the same way as the universe of tangible particles is partitioned from them.
In other words, they do not form a single, homogeneous parallel universe
vastly larger than the tangible one, but rather a huge number of parallel
universes, each similar in composition to the tangible one, and each obeying
the same laws of physics, but differing in that the particles are in different
positions in each universe.
A remark about terminology. The word ‘universe’ has traditionally been used
to mean ‘the whole of physical reality’. In that sense there can be at most
one universe. We could stick to that definition, and say that the entity we
have been accustomed to calling ‘the universe’ — namely, all the directly
perceptible matter and energy around us, and the surrounding space — is
not the whole universe after all, but only a small portion of it. Then we should
have to invent a new name for that small, tangible portion. But most
physicists prefer to carry on using the word ‘universe’ to denote the same
entity that it has always denoted, even though that entity now turns out to be
only a small part of physical reality. A new word, 
multiverse, has been coined
to denote physical reality as a whole.
Single-particle interference experiments such as I have been describing
show us that the multiverse exists and that it contains many counterparts of
each particle in the tangible universe. To reach the further conclusion that


the multiverse is roughly partitioned into parallel universes, we must consider
interference phenomena involving more than one tangible particle. The
simplest way of doing this is to ask, by way of a ‘thought experiment’, what
must be happening at the microscopic level when shadow photons strike an
opaque object. They are stopped, of course: we know that because
interference ceases when an opaque barrier is placed in the paths of
shadow photons. But why? What stops them? We can rule out the
straightforward answer — that they are absorbed, like tangible photons
would be, by the tangible atoms in the barrier. For one thing, we know that
shadow photons do not interact with tangible atoms. For another, we can
verify by measuring the atoms in the barrier (or more precisely, by replacing
the barrier by a detector) that they neither absorb energy nor change their
state in any way unless they are struck by tangible photons. Shadow
photons have no effect.
To put that another way, shadow photons and tangible photons are affected
in identical ways when they reach a given barrier, but the barrier itself is not
identically affected by the two types of photon. In fact, as far as we can tell, it
is not affected by shadow photons at all. That is indeed the defining property
of shadow photons, for if any material were observably affected by them,
that material could be used as a shadow-photon detector and the entire
phenomenon of shadows and interference would not be as I have described
it.
Hence there is some sort of shadow barrier at the same location as the
tangible barrier. It takes no great leap of imagination to conclude that this
shadow barrier is made up of the 
shadow atoms that we already know must
be present as counterparts of the tangible atoms in the barrier. There are
very many of them present for each tangible atom. Indeed, the total density
of shadow atoms in even the lightest fog would be more than sufficient to
stop a tank, let alone a photon, 
if they could all affect it. Since we find that
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