Symmetry of Physical Laws. Part III. Prediction and Retrodiction

Satosi Watanabe
Rev. Mod. Phys. 27, 179 – Published 1 April 1955
PDFExport Citation

Abstract

An attempt is made within the framework of the accepted quantum physics to achieve the maximum parallelism between prediction (inference of the future observational data from the present ones) and retrodiction (inference of the past observational data from the present ones). To implement this program, it is shown that the "retrodictive state function" (extrapolation of the present data to the past) can be just as useful as the ordinary "predictive state function" (extrapolation of the present data to the future). This leads to a formalism in which time-reversal becomes a linear transformation and double time-reversal becomes a c-number. In spite of this formal symmetry, it can be shown that the actual success of a retrodiction depends on the satisfaction of an additional condition which is not required in prediction, and which is not always fulfilled. From the same point of view, a logical loophole is pointed out in the indiscriminate application of the H-theorem to the past. The so-called irreversibility of observation is interpreted in terms of the decrease of "information" in the process of inference.

    DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/RevModPhys.27.179

    ©1955 American Physical Society

    Authors & Affiliations

    Satosi Watanabe

    • U. S. Naval Postgraduate School Monterey, California

    References (Subscription Required)

    Click to Expand
    Issue

    Vol. 27, Iss. 2 — April - June 1955

    Reuse & Permissions
    Access Options
    Author publication services for translation and copyediting assistance advertisement

    Authorization Required


    ×
    ×

    Images

    ×

    Sign up to receive regular email alerts from Reviews of Modern Physics

    Log In

    Cancel
    ×

    Search


    Article Lookup

    Paste a citation or DOI

    Enter a citation
    ×