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Encyclopedia > Quantum decoherence

In quantum mechanics, quantum decoherence is the mechanism by which quantum systems interact with their environments to exhibit probabilistically additive behavior - a feature of classical physics - and give the appearance of wavefunction collapse. Decoherence occurs when a system interacts with its environment, or any complex external system, in such a thermodynamically irreversible way that ensures different elements in the quantum superposition of the system+environment's wavefunction can no longer interfere with each other. Fig. ... Classical physics is physics based on principles developed before the rise of quantum theory, usually including the special theory of relativity and general theory of relativity. ... In certain interpretations of quantum mechanics, wavefunction collapse is one of two processes by which quantum systems apparently evolve according to the laws of quantum mechanics. ... In thermodynamics, a reversible process (or reversible cycle if the process is cyclic) is a process that can be reversed by means of infinitesimal changes in some property of the system. ... Quantum superposition is the application of the superposition principle to quantum mechanics. ... This article discusses the concept of a wavefunction as it relates to quantum mechanics. ... Interference of two circular waves - Wavelength (decreasing bottom to top) and Wave centers distance (increasing to the right). ...


Decoherence does not provide a mechanism for the actual wave function collapse; rather it provides a mechanism for the appearance of wavefunction collapse. The quantum nature of the system is simply "leaked" into the environment so that a total superposition of the wavefunction still exists, but exists beyond the realm of measurement. In quantum mechanics, quantum decoherence is the process by which quantum systems in complex environments exhibit classical behavior. ...


Decoherence represents a major problem for the practical realization of quantum computers, since these heavily rely on the undisturbed evolution of quantum coherences. The Bloch sphere is a representation of a qubit, the fundamental building block of quantum computers. ...

Contents

Mechanisms

Decoherence isn't a new theoretical framework, but instead a set of new theoretical perspectives in which the environment is no longer ignored in modeling systems. To examine how decoherence operates we will present an "intuitive" model (which, alas, does require some familiarity with the basics of quantum theory) making analogies between visualisable classical phase spaces and Hilbert spaces before presenting a more rigorous derivation of how decoherence destroys interference effects and the "quantum nature" of systems, in Dirac notation. Then the density matrix approach will be presented for perspective (there are many different ways of understanding decoherence). Phase space of a dynamical system with focal stability. ... In mathematics, a Hilbert space is a real or complex vector space with a positive definite sesquilinear form, that is complete under its norm. ... Bra-ket notation is the standard notation for describing quantum states in the theory of quantum mechanics. ... A density matrix is a self-adjoint (or Hermitian) positive-semidefinite matrix, (possibly infinite dimensional), of trace one, that describes the statistical state of a quantum system. ...


Phase space picture

An N-particle system can be represented in non-relativistic quantum mechanics by a wavefunction, ψ(x1,x2,...,xN), which has analogies with the classical phase space. A classical phase space contains a real-valued function in a 6N dimensions (each particle contributes 3 spatial coordinates and 3 momenta), whereas our "quantum" phase space contains a complex-valued function in a 3N dimensional space (since the position and momenta do not commute) but can still inherit much of the mathematical structure of a Hilbert space. Aside from these differences, however, the analogy holds. This article discusses the concept of a wavefunction as it relates to quantum mechanics. ... Phase space of a dynamical system with focal stability. ... In quantum Mechanics, we define: [A,B]=AB-BA If [A,B]=0, then we say A, B is commute. ... In mathematics, a Hilbert space is a real or complex vector space with a positive definite sesquilinear form, that is complete under its norm. ...


Different previously isolated, non-interacting systems occupy different phase spaces, or alternatively we can say they occupy different, lower-dimensional subspaces in the phase space of the joint system. The effective dimensionality of a system's phase space is the number of degrees of freedom present which --in non-relativistic models -- is 3 x the number of a system's free particles. For a macroscopic system this will be a very large dimensionality. When two systems (and the environment would be a system) start to interact, though, their associated state vectors are no longer constrained to the subspaces, but instead the combined state vector time-evolves a path through the "larger volume", whose dimensionality is the sum of the dimensions of the two subspaces. (Think, by analogy, of a square (2-d surface) extended by just one dimension (a line) to form a cube. The cube has a greater volume, in some sense, than its component square and line axes.) The relevance of this is that the extent that two vectors interfere with each other is a measure of how "close" they are to each other (formally, their overlap or Hilbert space scalar product together) in the phase space. When a system couples to an external environment the dimensionality of, and hence "volume" available, to the joint state vector increases enormously -- each environmental degree of freedom contributes an extra dimension. Screenshot (from SSCX Star Warzone). ... The phrase degrees of freedom is used in three different branches of science: in physics and physical chemistry, in mechanical and aerospace engineering, and in statistics. ... Macroscopic is commonly used to describe physical objects that are measurable and observable by the naked eye. ... In mathematics, a Hilbert space is a real or complex vector space with a positive definite sesquilinear form, that is complete under its norm. ... In mathematics, the dot product (also known as the scalar product and the inner product) is a function (·) : V × V → F, where V is a vector space and F its underlying field. ... The phrase degrees of freedom is used in three different branches of science: in physics and physical chemistry, in mechanical and aerospace engineering, and in statistics. ...


The original system's wavefunction can be expanded as a sum of elements in a quantum superposition, in a quite arbitrary way. Each expansion corresponds to a projection of the wave vector onto a basis, and the bases can be chosen at will. Let us choose any expansion where the resulting elements interact with the environment in an element-specific way; such elements will -- with overwhelming probability -- be rapidly separated from each other by their natural unitary time evolution along their own independent paths -- so much in fact that after a very short interaction there is almost no chance of any further interference and the process is effectively irreversible; the different elements effectively become "lost" from each other in the expanded phase space created by the coupling with the environment. The elements of the original system are said to have decohered. The environment has effectively selected out those expansions or decompositions of the original state vector that decohere (or lose phase coherence) with each other. This is called "environmentally-induced-superselection", or einselection.[1] The decohered elements of the system no longer exhibit quantum interference between each other, as might be seen in a double-slit experiment. Any elements that decohere from each other via environmental interactions are said to be quantum entangled with the environment. (Note the converse is not true: not all entangled states are decohered from each other.) In thermodynamics, a reversible process (or reversible cycle if the process is cyclic) is a process that can be reversed by means of infinitesimal changes in some property of the system. ... Einselection is short for environmentally-induced superselection, a nickname coined by Wojciech H. Zurek. ... Interference of two circular waves - Wavelength (decreasing bottom to top) and Wave centers distance (increasing to the right). ... The double-slit experiment consists of letting light diffract through two slits producing fringes on a screen. ... It has been suggested that Quantum coherence be merged into this article or section. ...


Any measuring device, in this model, acts as an environment since any measuring device or apparatus, at some stage along the measuring chain, has to be large enough to be read by humans; it must possess a very large number of hidden degrees of freedom. In effect the interactions may be considered to be quantum measurements. As a result of an interaction, the wave functions of the system and the measuring device become entangled with each other. Decoherence happens when different portions of the system's wavefunction become entangled in different ways with the measuring device. For two einselected elements of the entangled system's state to interfere, both the original system and the measuring in both elements device must significantly overlap, in the scalar product sense. As we have seen if the measuring device has many degrees of freedom, it is very unlikely for this to happen. The framework of quantum mechanics requires a careful definition of measurement, and a thorough discussion of its practical and philosophical implications. ... It has been suggested that Quantum coherence be merged into this article or section. ... In mathematics, the dot product (also known as the scalar product and the inner product) is a function (·) : V × V → F, where V is a vector space and F its underlying field. ...


As a consequence, the system behaves as a classical statistical ensemble of the different elements rather than as a single coherent quantum superposition of them. From the perspective of each ensemble member's measuring device, the system appears to have irreversibly collapsed onto a state with a precise value for the measured attributes, relative to that element. In physics, a statistical ensemble is a very large set of similar systems, considered all at once. ... Quantum superposition is the application of the superposition principle to quantum mechanics. ... In thermodynamics, a reversible process (or reversible cycle if the process is cyclic) is a process that can be reversed by means of infinitesimal changes in some property of the system. ... In certain interpretations of quantum mechanics, wavefunction collapse is one of two processes by which quantum systems apparently evolve according to the laws of quantum mechanics. ...


Dirac Notation

Let the system initially be in the state |psi rang where

|psi rang = sum_i |irang lang i|psi rang

where the |irangs form an einselected basis (environmentally induced selected eigen basis[1]); and let the environment initially be in the state |epsilonrang. The vector basis of the total combined system & environment can be formed by tensor producting the basis vectors of the subsystems together. Thus, before any interaction between the two subsystems, the joint state can we written as: Einselection is short for environmentally-induced superselection, a nickname coined by Wojciech H. Zurek. ... Fig. ... In linear algebra, a basis is a set of vectors that, in a linear combination, can represent every vector in a given vector space. ... In mathematics, the tensor product, denoted by , may be applied in different contexts to vectors, matrices, tensors, vector spaces, algebras and modules. ...

|mathit{before}rang = sum_i |irang |epsilon rang lang i|psi rang

There are two extremes in the way the system can interact with its environment: either (1) the system loses its distinct identity and merges with the environment (e.g. photons in a cold, dark cavity get converted into molecular excitations within the cavity walls), or (2) the system is not disturbed at all, even though the environment is disturbed (e.g. the idealised non-disturbing measurement). In general an interaction is a mixture of these two extremes, which we shall examine:


System absorbed by environment

If the environment absorbs the system, each element of the total system's basis interacts with the environment such that:

|i rang |epsilonrang evolves into |epsilon_irang

and so

|mathit{before}rang evolves into |mathit{after}rang = sum_i |epsilon_irang lang i|psi rang

where the unitarity of time-evolution demands that the total state basis remains orthonormal and in particular their scalar or inner products with each other vanish, since lang i|jrang = delta_{ij}: In mathematics and physics, unitarity is the property of an operator (or a matrix) that is unitary. ... In linear algebra, two vectors v and w are said to be orthonormal if they are both orthogonal (according to a given inner product) and normalized. ... In mathematics, the dot product (also known as the scalar product and the inner product) is a function (·) : V × V → F, where V is a vector space and F its underlying field. ... In mathematics, an inner product space is a vector space with additional structure, an inner product (also called a scalar product), which allows us to introduce geometrical notions such as angles and lengths of vectors. ...

lang epsilon_i|epsilon_jrang = delta_{ij}

This orthonormality of the environment states is the defining characteristic required for einselection.[1] Einselection is short for environmentally-induced superselection, a nickname coined by Wojciech H. Zurek. ...


System not disturbed by environment

This is the idealised measurement/undisturbed system case in which each element of the basis interacts with the environment such that:

|irang |epsilon rang evolves into the product |i,epsilon_irang = |i rang|epsilon_irang

i.e. the system disturbs the enviroment, but is itself undisturbed by the environment.


and so:

|mathit{before}rang evolves into |mathit{after}rang = sum_i |i,epsilon_irang lang i|psi rang

where, again, unitarity demands that: In mathematics and physics, unitarity is the property of an operator (or a matrix) that is unitary. ...

lang i,epsilon_i|j,epsilon_jrang = lang i|j rang lang epsilon_i|epsilon_jrang= delta_{ij} lang epsilon_i|epsilon_jrang = delta_{ij}

and additionally decoherence requires, by virtue of the large number of hidden degrees of freedom in the environment, that

lang epsilon_i|epsilon_jrang approx delta_{ij}

As before, this is the defining characteristic for decoherence to become einselection.[1] The approximation becomes more exact as the number of environmental degrees of freedom affected increases. Einselection is short for environmentally-induced superselection, a nickname coined by Wojciech H. Zurek. ...


Note that if the system basis |irang were not an einselected basis then the last condition is trivial since the disturbed environment is not a function of i and we have the trivial disturbed environment basis |epsilon_jrang = |epsilon'rang. This would correspond to the system basis being degenerate with respect the environmentally-defined-measurement-observable. For a complex environmental interaction (which would be expected for a typical macroscale interaction) a non-einselected basis would be hard to define.


Loss of Interference and the Transition from Quantum to Classical

The utility of decoherence lies in its application to the analysis of probabilities, before and after environmental interaction, and in particular to the vanishing of quantum interference terms after decoherence has occurred. If we ask what is the probability of observing the system making a transition or quantum leap from ψ to φ before ψ has interacted with its environment, then application of the Born probability rule states that the transition probability is the modulus squared of the scalar product of the two states: Interference of two circular waves - Wavelength (decreasing bottom to top) and Wave centers distance (increasing to the right). ... Quantum Leap is a science fiction television series that ran for 97 episodes from March 1989 to May 1993 on NBC. It follows the adventures of Dr. Samuel Beckett (played by Scott Bakula), a brilliant scientist who after researching time-travel, and doing experiments in something he calls The Imaging... In quantum mechanics, Born probability is a probability of an event calculated from a wavefunction or more generally from the density matrix. ...

mathit{prob}_{mathit{before}}(psi rightarrow phi) = |lang psi |phi rang|^2 = |sum_ipsi^*_i phi_i |^2 = sum_{i} |psi_i^*phi_i|^2 + sum_{ij;i ne j} psi^*_i psi_j phi^*_jphi_i

where psi_i = lang i|psi rang , psi_i^* = lang psi|i rang and phi_i = lang i|phi rang etc


Terms appear in the expansion of the transition probability above which involve i ne j; these can be thought of as representing interference between the different basis elements or quantum alternatives. This is a purely quantum effect and represents the non-additivity of the probabilities of quantum alternatives.


To calculate the probability of observing the system making a quantum leap from ψ to φ after ψ has interacted with its environment, then application of the Born probability rule states we must sum over the all the relevant possible states of the environment, Ei, before squaring the modulus: In quantum mechanics, Born probability is a probability of an event calculated from a wavefunction or more generally from the density matrix. ...

mathit{prob}_{mathit{after}}(psi rightarrow phi) = sum_j|lang mathit{after}| phi, epsilon_j rang|^2 = sum_j|sum_i psi_i^* lang i, epsilon_i|phi, epsilon_jrang |^2 = sum_j|sum_i psi_i^* lang i|phi rang lang epsilon_i|epsilon_j rang |^2

The internal summation vanishes when we apply the decoherence / einselection condition lang epsilon_i|epsilon_jrang approx delta_{ij} and the formula simplifies to: Einselection is short for environmentally-induced superselection, a nickname coined by Wojciech H. Zurek. ...

mathit{prob}_{mathit{after}}(psi rightarrow phi) approx sum_j|psi_j^* lang j|phirang |^2 = sum_i|psi^*_i phi_i |^2

If we compare this with the formula we derived before the environment introduced decoherence we can see that the effect of decoherence has been to move the summation sign Σi from inside of the modulus sign to outside. As a result all the cross- or quantum interference-terms: Interference of two circular waves - Wavelength (decreasing bottom to top) and Wave centers distance (increasing to the right). ...

sum_{ij;i ne j} psi^*_i psi_j phi^*_jphi_i

have vanished from the transition probability calculation. The decoherence has irreversibly converted quantum behaviour (additive probability amplitudes) to classical behaviour (additive probabilities).[2][1] In thermodynamics, a reversible process (or reversible cycle if the process is cyclic) is a process that can be reversed by means of infinitesimal changes in some property of the system. ... In quantum mechanics, a probability amplitude is a complex-valued function that describes an uncertain or unknown quantity. ...


In terms of density matrices, the loss of interference effects corresponds to the diagonalization of the "environmentally traced over" density matrix.[1] A density matrix is a self-adjoint (or Hermitian) positive-semidefinite matrix, (possibly infinite dimensional), of trace one, that describes the statistical state of a quantum system. ...


Density Matrix approach

The effect of decoherence on density matrices is essentially the decay or rapid vanishing of the off-diagonal elements of the partial trace of the joint system's density matrix, i.e. the trace, with respect to any environmental basis, of the density matrix of the combined system and its environment. The decoherence irreversibly converts the "averaged" or "environmentally traced over"[1] density matrix from a pure state to a reduced mixture; it is this that gives the appearance of wavefunction collapse. Again this is called "environmentally-induced-superselection", or einselection.[1] The advantage of taking the partial trace is that this procedure is indifferent to the environmental basis chosen. A density matrix is a self-adjoint (or Hermitian) positive-semidefinite matrix, (possibly infinite dimensional), of trace one, that describes the statistical state of a quantum system. ... In linear algebra and functional analysis, the partial trace is a generalization of the trace. ... A density matrix is a self-adjoint (or Hermitian) positive-semidefinite matrix, (possibly infinite dimensional), of trace one, that describes the statistical state of a quantum system. ... It has been suggested that this article or section be merged with Tracing. ... In thermodynamics, a reversible process (or reversible cycle if the process is cyclic) is a process that can be reversed by means of infinitesimal changes in some property of the system. ... In certain interpretations of quantum mechanics, wavefunction collapse is one of two processes by which quantum systems apparently evolve according to the laws of quantum mechanics. ... Einselection is short for environmentally-induced superselection, a nickname coined by Wojciech H. Zurek. ...


Timescales

Decoherence represents an extremely fast process for macroscopic objects, since these are interacting with many microscopic objects, with an enormous number of degrees of freedom, in their natural environment. The process explains why we tend not to observe quantum behaviour in everyday macroscopic objects despite their existing in a bath of air molecules and photons. It also explains why we do see classical fields emerge from the properties of the interaction between matter and radiation. The time taken for off-diagonal components of the density matrix to effectively vanish is called the decoherence time, and is typically extremely short for everyday, macroscale process.


Measurement

The discontinuous "wave function collapse" postulated in the Copenhagen interpretation to enable the theory to be related to the results of laboratory measurements is now to a large extent describable within the normal dynamics of quantum mechanics via the decoherence process. Consequently, decoherence is an important part of the modern version of the Copenhagen interpretation, based on Consistent Histories. Decoherence shows how a macroscopic system interacting with a lot of microscopic systems (e.g. collisions with air molecules or photons) moves from being in a pure quantum state—which in general will be a coherent superposition (see Schrödinger's cat)—to being in an incoherent mixture of these states. The weighting of each outcome in the mixture in case of measurement is exactly that which gives the probabilities of the different results of such a measurement. However, decoherence does not give a complete solution of the measurement problem, since all components of the wave function still exist in a global superposition, which is explicitly acknowledged in the many-worlds interpretation. All decoherence explains is why these coherences are no longer available for inspection by local observers. The Copenhagen interpretation is an interpretation of quantum mechanics formulated by Niels Bohr and Werner Heisenberg while collaborating in Copenhagen around 1927. ... In quantum mechanics, the consistent histories approach is intended to give a modern interpretation of quantum mechanics, generalising the conventional Copenhagen interpretation and providing a natural interpretation of quantum cosmology. ... Schrödingers Cat: If the nucleus in the bottom left decays, the geiger counter on its right will sense it and trigger the release of the gas. ... The measurement problem is the key set of questions that every interpretation of quantum mechanics must answer. ... // The many-worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics or MWI, also known as the relative state formulation, theory of the universal wavefunction, many-universes interpretation or just many worlds is an interpretation of quantum mechanics that claims to resolve all the paradoxes of quantum theory by allowing every possible outcome to...


Mathematical details

Let's assume for the moment the system in question consists of a subsystem being studied, A and the "environment" ε, and the total Hilbert space is the tensor product of a Hilbert space describing A, HA and a Hilbert space describing E, Hε: that is, In mathematics, a Hilbert space is a real or complex vector space with a positive definite sesquilinear form, that is complete under its norm. ... In mathematics, the tensor product, denoted by , may be applied in different contexts to vectors, matrices, tensors, vector spaces, algebras and modules. ...

H=H_Aotimes H_epsilon.

This is a reasonably good approximation in the case where A and ε are relatively independent (e.g. we don't have things like parts of A mixing with parts of ε or vice versa). The point is, the interaction with the environment is for all practical purposes unavoidable (e.g. even a single excited atom in a vacuum would emit a photon which would then go off). Let's say this interaction is described by a unitary transformation U acting upon H. Assume the initial state of the environment is |mathrm{in}rangle and the initial state of A is the superposition state A unitary transformation is an isomorphism (but not an antiisomorphism; that corresponds to an antiunitary transformation) between two Hilbert spaces or an automorphism of a single Hilbert space. ...

c_1 | psi_1 rangle + c_2|psi_2rangle

where |psi_1 rangle and |psi_2 rangle are orthogonal and there is no entanglement initially. Also, choose an orthonormal basis for HA, { |e_irangle }_i. (This could be a "continuously indexed basis" or a mixture of continuous and discrete indexes, in which case we would have to use a rigged Hilbert space and be more careful about what we mean by orthonormal but that's an inessential detail for expository purposes.) Then, we can expand It has been suggested that Quantum coherence be merged into this article or section. ... In mathematics, a rigged Hilbert space is a construction designed to link the distribution (test function) and square-integrable aspects of functional analysis. ...

U(|psi_1rangleotimes|mathrm{in}rangle)

and

U(|psi_2rangleotimes|mathrm{in}rangle)

uniquely as

sum_i |e_irangleotimes|f_{1i}rangle

and

sum_i |e_irangleotimes|f_{2i}rangle

respectively uniquely. One thing to realize is that the environment contains a huge number of degrees of freedom, a good number of them interacting with each other all the time. This makes the following assumption reasonable in a handwaving way, which can be shown to be true in some simple toy models. Assume that there exists a basis for HA such that |f_{1i}rangle and |f_{1j}rangle are all approximally orthogonal to a good degree if i is not j and the same thing for |f_{2i}rangle and |f_{2j}rangle and also |f_{1i}rangle and |f_{2j}rangle for any i and j (the decoherence property).


This often turns out to be true (as a reasonable conjecture) in the position basis because how A interacts with the environment would often depend critically upon the position of the objects in A. Then, if we take the partial trace over the environment, we'd find the density state is approximately described by In linear algebra and functional analysis, the partial trace is a generalization of the trace. ...

sum_i (langle f_{1i}|f_{1i}rangle+langle f_{2i}|f_{2i}rangle)|e_iranglelangle e_i|

(i.e. we have a diagonal mixed state and there is no constructive or destructive interference and the "probabilities" add up classically). The time it takes for U(t) (the unitary operator as a function of time) to display the decoherence property is called the decoherence time. The term mixed state refers to a concept in physics, particularly quantum mechanics. ...


Experimental observation

The collapse of a quantum superposition into a single definite state was quantitatively measured for the first time by Haroche and his co-workers at the École Normale Supérieure in Paris in 1996 [2]. Their approach involved sending individual rubidium atoms, each in a superposition of two states, through a microwave-filled cavity. The two quantum states both cause shifts in the phase of the microwave field, but by different amounts, so that the field itself is also put into a superposition of two states. As the cavity field exchanges energy with its surroundings, however, its superposition appears to collapse into a single definite state. The quadrangle at the main ENS building on rue dUlm is known as the Cour aux Ernests – the Ernests being the goldfish in the pond. ... -1...


Haroche and his colleagues measured the resulting decoherence via correlations between the energy levels of pairs of atoms sent through the cavity with various time delays between the atoms.


Historical note

Before an understanding of decoherence was developed the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics treated wavefunction collapse as a fundamental, a priori process. Decoherence provides an explanatory mechanism for the appearance of wavefunction collapse and was first developed by David Bohm in 1952 who applied it to Louis DeBroglie's pilot wave theory, producing Bohmian mechanics[3][4], the first successful hidden variables interpretation of quantum mechanics. Decoherence was then used by Hugh Everett in 1957 to form the core of his many-worlds interpretation[5] . However decoherence was largely[6] ignored for many years, and not until the 1980s [7] [8]/90s did decoherent-based explanations of the appearance of wavefunction collapse become popular, with the greater acceptance of the use of reduced density matrices[2]. The range of decoherent interpretations have subsequently been extended around the idea, such as consistent histories. Some versions of the Copenhagen Interpretation have been rebranded to include decoherence. The Copenhagen interpretation is an interpretation of quantum mechanics formulated by Niels Bohr and Werner Heisenberg while collaborating in Copenhagen around 1927. ... In certain interpretations of quantum mechanics, wavefunction collapse is one of two processes by which quantum systems apparently evolve according to the laws of quantum mechanics. ... In certain interpretations of quantum mechanics, wavefunction collapse is one of two processes by which quantum systems apparently evolve according to the laws of quantum mechanics. ... David Bohm. ... Louis-Victor-Pierre-Raymond, 7th duc de Broglie, generally known as Louis de Broglie (August 15, 1892 – March 19, 1987), was a French physicist and Nobel Prize laureate. ... In theoretical physics, pilot wave theory was the first known example of a hidden variable theory, presented by Louis de Broglie in 1927. ... This article or section may be confusing or unclear for some readers, and should be edited to rectify this. ... Hugh Everett III (November 11, 1930 – July 19, 1982) was an American physicist who first proposed the many-worlds interpretation of quantum physics, which he called his relative state formulation. ... // The many-worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics or MWI, also known as the relative state formulation, theory of the universal wavefunction, many-universes interpretation or just many worlds is an interpretation of quantum mechanics that claims to resolve all the paradoxes of quantum theory by allowing every possible outcome to... A density matrix is a self-adjoint (or Hermitian) positive-semidefinite matrix, (possibly infinite dimensional), of trace one, that describes the statistical state of a quantum system. ... In quantum mechanics, the consistent histories approach is intended to give a modern interpretation of quantum mechanics, generalising the conventional Copenhagen interpretation and providing a natural interpretation of quantum cosmology. ...


References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Wojciech H. Zurek, Decoherence, einselection, and the quantum origins of the classical, Reviews of Modern Physics 2003, 75, 715 or [1]
  2. ^ a b Wojciech H. Zurek, Decoherence and the transition from quantum to classical, Physics Today, 44, pp 36-44 (1991)
  3. ^ David Bohm, A Suggested Interpretation of the Quantum Theory in Terms of "Hidden Variables", I, Physical Review, (1952), 84, pp 166-179
  4. ^ David Bohm, A Suggested Interpretation of the Quantum Theory in Terms of "Hidden Variables", II, Physical Review, (1952), 85, pp 180-193
  5. ^ Hugh Everett, Relative State Formulation of Quantum Mechanics, Reviews of Modern Physics vol 29, (1957) pp 454-462.
  6. ^ H. Dieter Zeh, On the Interpretation of Measurement in Quantum Theory, Foundation of Physics, vol. 1, pp. 69-76, (1970).
  7. ^ Wojciech H. Zurek, Pointer Basis of Quantum Apparatus: Into what Mixture does the Wave Packet Collapse?, Physical Review D, 24, pp. 1516-1525 (1981)
  8. ^ Wojciech H. Zurek, Environment-Induced Superselection Rules, Physical Review D, 26, pp.1862-1880, (1982)

. Wojciech Hubert Zurek is a well-known physicist, as a Laboratory Fellow at Los Alamos National Laboratory. ... Einselection is short for environmentally-induced superselection, a nickname coined by Wojciech H. Zurek. ... Wojciech Hubert Zurek is a well-known physicist, as a Laboratory Fellow at Los Alamos National Laboratory. ... David Bohm. ... David Bohm. ... Hugh Everett III (November 11, 1930 – July 19, 1982) was an American physicist who first proposed the many-worlds interpretation of quantum physics, which he called his relative state formulation. ... This article needs to be cleaned up to conform to a higher standard of quality. ... Wojciech Hubert Zurek is a well-known physicist, as a Laboratory Fellow at Los Alamos National Laboratory. ... Wojciech Hubert Zurek is a well-known physicist, as a Laboratory Fellow at Los Alamos National Laboratory. ...

Further reading

  • Omnes, R. (1999). Understanding Quantum Mechanics. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
  • Joos, E., et al. (2003). Decoherence and the Appearance of a Classical World in Quantum Theory, 2nd edition, Berlin: Springer.
  • Zurek, Wojciech H. (2003). "Decoherence and the transition from quantum to classical — REVISITED", arXiv:quant-ph/0306072 (An updated version of PHYSICS TODAY, 44:36-44 (1991) article)
  • Schlosshauer, Maximilian (23 February 2005). ""Decoherence, the Measurement Problem, and Interpretations of Quantum Mechanics"". Reviews of Modern Physics 76(2004): 1267–1305. arXiv:quant-ph/0312059, DOI:10.1103/RevModPhys.76.1267.
  • J.J. Halliwell, J. Perez-Mercader, Wojciech H. Zurek, eds, The Physical Origins of Time Asymmetry, Part 3: Decoherence, ISBN 0-521-56837-4
  • Berthold-Georg Englert, Marlan O. Scully & Herbert Walther, Quantum Optical Tests of Complementarity , Nature, Vol 351, pp 111-116 (9 May 1991) and (same authors) The Duality in Matter and Light Scientific American, pg 56-61, (December 1994). Demonstrates that complementarity is enforced, and quantum interference effects destroyed, by irreversible object-apparatus correlations, and not, as was previously popularly believed, by Heisenberg's uncertainty principle itself.

Wojciech Hubert Zurek is a well-known physicist, as a Laboratory Fellow at Los Alamos National Laboratory. ... arXiv (pronounced archive, as if the X were the Greek letter χ) is an archive for electronic preprints of scientific papers in the fields of physics, mathematics, computer science and biology which can be accessed via the internet. ... arXiv (pronounced archive, as if the X were the Greek letter χ) is an archive for electronic preprints of scientific papers in the fields of physics, mathematics, computer science and biology which can be accessed via the internet. ... A digital object identifier (or DOI) is a permanent identifier (permalink) given to a World Wide Web file or other Internet document so that if its Internet address changes, users will be redirected to its new address. ... Wojciech Hubert Zurek is a well-known physicist, as a Laboratory Fellow at Los Alamos National Laboratory. ... Marlan Scully is a theoretical physicist best known for his work in quantum optics. ... In physics, complementarity is a basic principle of quantum theory, and refers to effects such as the wave-particle duality, in which different measurements made on a system reveal it to have either particle-like or wave-like properties. ... Interference of two circular waves - Wavelength (decreasing bottom to top) and Wave centers distance (increasing to the right). ... Irreversibility is that property of an event which makes reverting back to the state before the occurrence of the event impossible. ... The framework of quantum mechanics requires a careful definition of measurement, and a thorough discussion of its practical and philosophical implications. ... In quantum physics, the Heisenberg uncertainty principle or the Heisenberg indeterminacy principle — the latter name given to it by Niels Bohr — states that when measuring conjugate quantities, which are pairs of observables of a single elementary particle, increasing the accuracy of the measurement of one quantity increases the uncertainty of...

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  Results from FactBites:
 
Quantum decoherence - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (1051 words)
In the many-worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics, decoherence is responsible for the appearance of wavefunction collapse.
Decoherence is caused by interactions with a second system which may be thought of as either "the environment" or as "a measuring device".
Decoherence represents a major problem for the practical realization of quantum computers, since these heavily rely on undisturbed evolution of quantum coherences.
Quantum computer - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (3422 words)
Quantum computers are different from classical computers such as DNA computers and computers based on transistors, even though these may ultimately use some kind of quantum mechanical effect (for example covalent bonds).
In quantum mechanics, the state of a physical system (such as an electron or a photon) is described by an element of a mathematical object called a Hilbert space.
Qubits for a quantum computer can be implemented using particles with two spin states: "up" and "down"; in fact any system, possessing an observable quantity A which is conserved under time evolution and such that A has at least two discrete and sufficiently spaced consecutive eigenvalues, is a suitable candidate for implementing a qubit.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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