The italics are called for. We have reached the critical point. The suggestion is that the universe as a whole is described by a single, stationary, indeed static state. Why should this – with its implication that nothing happens – be so? This is where we start to make contact with the earlier part of the book. Time and change come to an end when Machian classical dynamics meets quantum mechanics. We have seen that a Machian universe should have only one value of the energy: zero. We also know (Box 2) that a quantum theory can be obtained by quantizing a corresponding classical theory. In fact, it is easy to show that whereas quantizing Newtonian dynamics, with its external framework of space and time, leads to the time-dependent Schrödinger equation, quantizing the simple Machian model considered in Chapter 7 leads to a quantum theory in which the basic equation is not the time-dependent but the stationary Schrödinger equation.
If the Machian approach to classical dynamics is correct, quantum cosmology will have no dynamics. It will be timeless. It must also be frameless.
CREATION AND THE SCHRÖDINGER EQUATION
Before I can explain how this can be achieved, I must tell you what the Schrödinger equation is like and what it can do. I believe it is even more remarkable than physicists realize. This is where – if I am right – we are getting near the secret of creation.
When Schrödinger created wave mechanics, Bohr’s was the only existing model of the atom. It suggested that atoms could exist in stationary states, each with a fixed energy, photons being emitted when the atom jumped between them. Schrödinger’s great aim was to explain how the stationary states arise and the jumps occur. De Broglie’s proposal suggested strongly that a stationary state should be described by a wave function that oscillated rapidly in time with fixed frequency, though its amplitude might vary in space. As a first step Schrödinger therefore looked for an equation for the variation in space.
It is ironic that only later did he find the time-dependent equation from which, strictly speaking, he should have derived this equation. However, he had luck and was guided by good intuition. Although it is easy for mathematicians, I shall not go into the details of how Schrödinger found his equations or how to get from one to the other. Box 13 gives the minimum about the stationary equation needed to understand the thrust of the story.
BOX 13 How Creation Works
You can think of the Schrödinger wave function in a stationary state as follows. At each point of the configuration space Q, imagine a child swinging a ball in a vertical circle on a string of length
It does this by imposing a condition at each point of Q. The sum of two numbers, calculated in definite ways, must equal a third. The first number is the most interesting but the most difficult to find. Take a quantum system of three bodies. Its configuration space Q has nine dimensions. Each point in Q corresponds to a position of the three bodies in absolute space. Imagine holding two bodies fixed, and moving the third along a line in absolute space. This will move you along a line in Q. Suppose that along it you plot
At each point of Q there are nine such curvatures because Q has nine dimensions, one for each of the three directions in absolute space in which each particle can move. The first number in the Schrödinger condition is the sum of these nine curvatures after each has been multiplied by the mass of the particle for which it has been calculated. I shall call this the