We demonstrate that quantum mechanics emerges naturally from the five-dimensional hydrodynamic spacetime framework. The central insight is that quantum probability arises not from fundamental indeterminacy but from observers' confinement to three spatial dimensions. An observer measuring a particle's position integrates over all possible values of the fourth spatial coordinate w (the time density dimension), creating an apparent probability distribution even for particles with definite five-dimensional positions. Starting from the classical geodesic equations in five-dimensional spacetime, we derive the Schrödinger equation through dimensional projection and the assumption of w-confinement at the scale Δw ~ ℏ/ (mc). The Planck constant ℏ emerges as a geometric quantity setting the width of the observational window in the w-direction. We show that Heisenberg's uncertainty principle, wave-particle duality, quantum tunneling, and entanglement all follow from the five-dimensional geometric structure without additional postulates. The theory makes a striking prediction: particles should possess excited states in the w-direction with masses mₙ = (2n+1) m₀, where m₀ is the ground state mass and n = 0, 1, 2,. . . For electrons, this predicts states at 1. 53 MeV/c², 2. 56 MeV/c², and higher energies. Searches for these resonances in high-energy collisions provide direct experimental tests of the geometric origin of quantum mechanics. This work resolves the measurement problem by showing that wavefunction collapse is the process of dimensional projection from five to three dimensions, constrained by the observer's limited w-resolution. Quantum mechanics is thus revealed as the statistical mechanics of observers confined to lower-dimensional hypersurfaces within a deterministic five-dimensional spacetime. This is the second paper of a trilogy. The foundational framework is developed in "Five-Dimensional Hydrodynamic Spacetime: Time Density and Dark Energy Complementarity. " Dark matter implications are addressed in "Dark Matter as Temporal Displacement in Five-Dimensional Hydrodynamic Spacetime. "
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Shota Kisida
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Shota Kisida (Fri,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/6990112b2ccff479cfe57a1b — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18625412