Close Menu
  • Home
  • United States
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest USA news and updates directly to your inbox.

What's On
Live-action remake of ‘Moana’ gets ravaged by critics in latest blow to Disney Studios

Live-action remake of ‘Moana’ gets ravaged by critics in latest blow to Disney Studios

July 9, 2026
‘Maternal Instinct’ Director on How Taylor Parker Was Able to Trick People About Fake Pregnancy

‘Maternal Instinct’ Director on How Taylor Parker Was Able to Trick People About Fake Pregnancy

July 9, 2026
Sean Manaea finally gives Mets the length they desperately needed

Sean Manaea finally gives Mets the length they desperately needed

July 9, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Live-action remake of ‘Moana’ gets ravaged by critics in latest blow to Disney Studios
  • ‘Maternal Instinct’ Director on How Taylor Parker Was Able to Trick People About Fake Pregnancy
  • Sean Manaea finally gives Mets the length they desperately needed
  • Physicists develop the first working model of quantum mechanics using only ‘real’ numbers
  • California’s ‘largest-ever tax hike’ eviscerated by critics: ‘Final straw’
  • NY Attorney General Letitia James ranked among worst in US for prosecuting Medicaid fraud: analysis
  • Megan Rapinoe blames Trump for distracting US players ahead of World Cup loss to Belgium
  • The Valley’s Janet Caperna Details Decision to Share Past Sexual Assault in Emotional Statement
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
Join Us
USA TimesUSA Times
Newsletter Login
  • Home
  • United States
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release
USA TimesUSA Times
Home » Physicists develop the first working model of quantum mechanics using only ‘real’ numbers
Physicists develop the first working model of quantum mechanics using only ‘real’ numbers
Science

Physicists develop the first working model of quantum mechanics using only ‘real’ numbers

News RoomBy News RoomJuly 9, 20260 ViewsNo Comments

For the first time, physicists have built a working version of quantum mechanics without complex numbers — numbers that have been considered essential to the theory for nearly a century.

Complex numbers combine a regular “real” number with an “imaginary” one — a multiple of the square root of -1, represented by the symbol i — into a single value, like 3 + 4i. The square root of -1 doesn’t correspond to any quantity you could count or measure directly (you can’t have negative one apple, for instance), which is why mathematicians call it imaginary.

Still, complex numbers have many useful applications. Engineers use them to describe alternating electrical current. Physicists use them to describe waves. And ever since quantum mechanics was first documented in the 1920s, complex numbers have been built directly into its equations. Quantum mechanics describes particles using something called a wave function, and that description relies on complex numbers.

In 2021, a team of physicists predicted that a version of quantum mechanics built with only real numbers would make incorrect predictions in certain experiments involving multiple particles. The following year, other researchers ran those experiments, and the results matched standard quantum mechanics, not the real-number version. Complex numbers seemed unavoidable.

But that 2021 result rested on one specific assumption: a particular mathematical rule for combining particles. That led physicists to ask a question: Are complex numbers actually necessary to describe reality at the quantum level, or are they just a convenience?


You may like

Now, in a new study published June 18 in the journal Physical Review Letters, researchers have found a way around the 2021 result.

“Complex numbers are not needed for quantum mechanics,” study first author Pedro Barrios Hita, a theoretical physicist and doctoral student at the German Aerospace Center and Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf, told Live Science.

Get the world’s most fascinating discoveries delivered straight to your inbox.

A different rule

The 2021 result relied on a specific mathematical rule called the tensor product, which combines two separate quantum systems into one. If you have two particles and you want to combine them into a single mathematical description, you can use the tensor product. It’s a rule taught in every quantum mechanics textbook.

It works well for ordinary complex-number quantum mechanics, but past attempts to build a real-number version around that same rule ran into trouble. They couldn’t reproduce the correlations seen in experiments involving three or more entangled particles.

In their new study, Barrios Hita and his colleagues found that the tensor product isn’t the only option. They built quantum mechanics around a different rule based on an idea: An action taken on one part of a system shouldn’t have any effect on a separate part of it.


What to read next

Entanglement is just one aspect of quantum mechanics that seems to defy reality. Now, the math behind such phenomena can be expressed with only “real” numbers for the first time.

(Image credit: koto_feja/Getty Images)

In ordinary quantum mechanics, multiplying a particle’s state by i is undetectable on its own. But when two particles combine, that i can shuffle over and effectively attach itself to the other particle instead. Physicists call this phase kickback, and it’s built automatically into the tensor product.

Barrios Hita’s team had to recreate that shuffling using only real numbers. They attached a small “flag” to each particle to keep track of what the imaginary part used to store. Then, they treated certain flag combinations as physically identical, even though they looked different on paper. That grouping step allowed their real-number version to match every prediction of standard quantum mechanics, including the multiparticle cases that had tripped up earlier attempts.

At its core, the trick is simple. A complex number, like 3 + 4i, is really just a pair of ordinary real numbers (3 and 4) — the i is only a label marking which one is the imaginary part. “A complex number is nothing but two real numbers,” Barrios Hita said. His team essentially built a bookkeeping system that tracks those two real numbers separately, instead of combining them into one complex number. It took a long time to figure out how to make that work consistently across multiple combined particles. But once they did, Barrios Hita said, the underlying structure turned out to be elegant.

The result puts quantum mechanics in the same boat as other physics theories that are often written using complex numbers purely for convenience, Barrios Hita said.

“There are many other theories, like, for example, electromagnetism,” Barrios Hita added, “which has complex numbers at its core. So, these theories are formulated using complex numbers, but [they] are not fundamental. They’re just helpful tools to help express equations.”

The work doesn’t change any experimental predictions or point to new quantum technology. It’s also currently limited to systems with a finite number of quantum states. Extending it to infinite-dimensional systems, which show up in many real physics problems, is a natural next step, and other researchers are already looking into it. Barrios Hita is moving on to different research, on how quantum properties like entanglement can be used as a resource.

Still, the study settles a decades-long debate. Complex numbers make quantum mechanics easier to write down, but they aren’t required to make it work.

Hita, P. B., Trushechkin, A., Kampermann, H., Epping, M., & Bruß, D. (2026). Quantum Mechanics based on real Numbers: A consistent description. Physical Review Letters, 136(24). https://doi.org/10.1103/4k13-sdjh

Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram WhatsApp Email

Keep Reading

Malaria had nearly been eliminated around a giant dam in the Amazon — but then it came roaring back. Experts just discovered why.

Malaria had nearly been eliminated around a giant dam in the Amazon — but then it came roaring back. Experts just discovered why.

Dirty ‘button’ unearthed by metal detectorist turns out to be a rare 900-year-old coin from Norway’s last Viking king, Magnus Barefoot

Dirty ‘button’ unearthed by metal detectorist turns out to be a rare 900-year-old coin from Norway’s last Viking king, Magnus Barefoot

‘800 seconds for a sick visit’: Some factors driving antibiotic resistance have nothing to do with biology, says medical sociologist Julia Szymczak

‘800 seconds for a sick visit’: Some factors driving antibiotic resistance have nothing to do with biology, says medical sociologist Julia Szymczak

New robotic heart mimics common, mysterious condition to help researchers study it

New robotic heart mimics common, mysterious condition to help researchers study it

Quantum computing wielded to create extremely rare material critical to nuclear fusion

Quantum computing wielded to create extremely rare material critical to nuclear fusion

‘Astronomers have to revise estimates’: The Milky Way may be larger, heavier and more lopsided than we realized

‘Astronomers have to revise estimates’: The Milky Way may be larger, heavier and more lopsided than we realized

Scientists build tiny ‘diving suit’ for cockroaches, turning them into search-and rescue cyborgs

Scientists build tiny ‘diving suit’ for cockroaches, turning them into search-and rescue cyborgs

Extreme heat waves are making our cities buckle. Investing in urban nature is no longer optional. | Manuel Esperon-Rodriguez

Extreme heat waves are making our cities buckle. Investing in urban nature is no longer optional. | Manuel Esperon-Rodriguez

100,000 years ago, one of the earliest Homo sapiens outside Africa was stabbed in the face, analysis finds

100,000 years ago, one of the earliest Homo sapiens outside Africa was stabbed in the face, analysis finds

Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Editors Picks

‘Maternal Instinct’ Director on How Taylor Parker Was Able to Trick People About Fake Pregnancy

‘Maternal Instinct’ Director on How Taylor Parker Was Able to Trick People About Fake Pregnancy

July 9, 2026
Sean Manaea finally gives Mets the length they desperately needed

Sean Manaea finally gives Mets the length they desperately needed

July 9, 2026
Physicists develop the first working model of quantum mechanics using only ‘real’ numbers

Physicists develop the first working model of quantum mechanics using only ‘real’ numbers

July 9, 2026
California’s ‘largest-ever tax hike’ eviscerated by critics: ‘Final straw’

California’s ‘largest-ever tax hike’ eviscerated by critics: ‘Final straw’

July 9, 2026

Subscribe to News

Get the latest USA news and updates directly to your inbox.

Latest News
NY Attorney General Letitia James ranked among worst in US for prosecuting Medicaid fraud: analysis

NY Attorney General Letitia James ranked among worst in US for prosecuting Medicaid fraud: analysis

July 9, 2026
Megan Rapinoe blames Trump for distracting US players ahead of World Cup loss to Belgium

Megan Rapinoe blames Trump for distracting US players ahead of World Cup loss to Belgium

July 9, 2026
The Valley’s Janet Caperna Details Decision to Share Past Sexual Assault in Emotional Statement

The Valley’s Janet Caperna Details Decision to Share Past Sexual Assault in Emotional Statement

July 9, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest WhatsApp TikTok Instagram
© 2026 USA Times. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.