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This chapter begins the final section of the book, which presents both review and new results of original research on decoherence and measurement theory. In this chapter, it is shown that normal quantum mechanics can lead to irreversible behavior in an open system, in contrast to the expectation of the Poincaré theorem that predicts repeating, cyclical behavior for all closed systems. The quantum Boltzmann equation, which implies the famous H-theorem that underlies all statistical mechanics, is derived.
We show a new method of estimating the Hausdorff measure of a set from below. The method requires computing the subsequent closest return times of a point to itself.
In a general setting of an ergodic dynamical system, we give a more accurate calculation of the speed of the recurrence of a point to itself (or to a fixed point). Precisely, we show that for a certain $\unicode[STIX]{x1D709}$ depending on the dimension of the space, $\liminf _{n\rightarrow +\infty }(n\log \log n)^{\unicode[STIX]{x1D709}}d(T^{n}x,x)=0$ almost everywhere and $\liminf _{n\rightarrow +\infty }(n\log \log n)^{\unicode[STIX]{x1D709}}d(T^{n}x,y)=0$ for almost all $x$ and $y$. This is done by assuming the exponential decay of correlations and making a weak assumption on the invariant measure.
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