kvantumberendedség
Kvantumberendedség is a hypothetical principle in quantum theory describing how boundary conditions and confinement shape the long-time behavior of quantum systems. In this view, the distribution over possible end states becomes largely determined by the system's boundaries and surrounding environment, rather than solely by its initial state and intrinsic dynamics.
The term is a neologism formed from the Hungarian-inspired word kvantum for quantum and a suffix intended
Core ideas include that certain boundary conditions induce effective selection rules, suppressing some dynamical pathways and
Potential implications include more robust qubit realization in finite devices, control of state localization in nanoscale
Critics argue that the concept overlaps with established notions of decoherence, environment-induced superselection, and finite-size effects,
See also: open quantum systems, quantum decoherence, boundary conditions in quantum mechanics, non-Hermitian quantum mechanics.