quantum algorithms:
In the context of quantum mechanics, the collapse of the wave function, also known as the reduction of the wave packet, is said to occur after observation or measurement, when a wave function expressed as the sum of eigenfunctions of the observable is projected randomly onto one of them. Different interpretations of quantum mechanics understand this process differently.
The perspective associated with the Bayesian interpretation of quantum mechanics observes (see below) that the apparent collapse is just the mathematical reflection of the formula for conditional expectation values in quantum probability theory.
There is a close relation between wave function collapse and conditional expectation values in quantum probability (e.g. Kuperberg 05, section 1.2, Yuan 12):
Let be a quantum probability space, hence a complex star algebra of quantum observables, and a state on a star-algebra .
This means that for any observable, its expectation value in the given state is
More generally, if is a real idempotent/projector
thought of as an event, then for any observable the conditional expectation value of , conditioned on the observation of , is (e.g. Redei-Summers 06, section 7.3, see also Fröhlich-Schubnel 15, (5.49), Fröhlich 19 (45))
Now assume a star-representation of the algebra of observables by linear operators on a Hilbert space is given, and that the state is a pure state, hence given by a vector (“wave function”) via the Hilbert space inner product as
In this case the expression for the conditional expectation value (2) of an observable conditioned on an idempotent observable becomes (notationally suppressing the representation )
where in the last step we used (2).
This says that assuming that has been observed in the pure state , then the corresponding conditional expectation values are the same as actual expectation values but for the new pure state .
This is the statement of “wave function collapse”
The original wave function is , and after observing it “collapses” to (up to normalization).
Early explicit discussion of wavefunction collapse in quantum measurements, including discussion relating to historical experiments:
John von Neumann, §III.3 and §VI of:
Mathematische Grundlagen der Quantenmechanik, Springer (1932, 1971) [doi:10.1007/978-3-642-96048-2]
Mathematical Foundations of Quantum Mechanics Princeton University Press (1955) [doi:10.1515/9781400889921, Wikipedia entry]
But the formulation in von Neumann 1932 postulated that a pure state would collapse to a mixed state when the quantum observable‘s eigenvalues are degenerate.
This problem was pointed out and the modern formulation of the collapse postulate was formulated by:
Über die Zustandsänderung durch den Meßprozeß, Ann. Phys. 8 (1951) 322–328 [doi:10.1002/andp.19504430510]
Concerning the state-change due to the measurement process, Ann. Phys. 15 9 (2006) 663-670 [pdf, pdf]
Early review:
Textbook accounts in quantum information theory:
Michael A. Nielsen, Isaac L. Chuang, §2.2.3 of: Quantum computation and quantum information, Cambridge University Press (2000) [doi:10.1017/CBO9780511976667, pdf, pdf]
Joseph M. Renes, eq. (3.2) in: Quantum Information Theory (2015) [pdf], (A.2) in: De Gruyter (2022) [doi:10.1515/9783110570250]
Discussion from the point of view of quantum probability:
Greg Kuperberg, A concise introduction to quantum probability, quantum mechanics, and quantum computation (2005) [pdf, pdf]
Miklos Redei, Stephen Summers, Quantum Probability Theory (arXiv:quant-ph/0601158)
Qiaochu Yuan, Finite noncommutative probability, the Born rule, and wave function collapse, 2012
Jürg Fröhlich, B. Schubnel, Quantum Probability Theory and the Foundations of Quantum Mechanics. In: Blanchard P., Fröhlich J. (eds.) The Message of Quantum Science. Lecture Notes in Physics, vol 899. Springer 2015 (arXiv:1310.1484, doi:10.1007/978-3-662-46422-9_7)
Jürg Fröhlich, The structure of quantum theory, Chapter 6 in The quest for laws and structure, EMS 2016 (doi, doi:10.4171/164-1/8)
See also
Wikipedia, Wave function collapse
Wikipedia, Born rule
More speculative discussion of state collapse as caused by stochastic terms added to the Schrödinger equation:
from the point of view of the symplectic formulation of quantum mechanics:
Last revised on August 3, 2023 at 09:35:51. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.