Questions about measurement of a particle in superposition

In summary, the conversation discusses the concept of superposition and its implications in quantum mechanics. It raises questions about whether the measurement apparatus and experimenters also become in superposition when performing a measurement on a particle in superposition. The conversation also touches on the idea of entanglement and how it relates to the measurement process. Finally, it explores the role of decoherence in producing indeterminacy in measurement outcomes.
  • #1
entropy1
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I have a very basic question about superposition.

Suppose two experimenters do a measurement on a particle in superposition. Does de measurement apparatus become in superposition? Do the experimenters become in superposition?

What is superposition?
 
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  • #2
entropy1 said:
I have a very basic question about superposition.
Suppose two experimenters do a measurement on a particle in superposition. Does the measurement apparatus become in superposition? Do the experimenters become in superposition?
What is superposition?
Answering in reverse order: superposition is the mathematical fact that the state of a quantum particle can always be written as the sum of other states. Note that "always" - every quantum state is a superposition of other states, in the same way that every vector can always be written as the sum of other vectors. In fact, the mathematical formalism of quantum mechanics starts with the axiom that the possible states of a quantum particle form a vector space.

I'm not sure why you are specifying two experimenters instead of one. Are you thinking that one experimenter performs one measurement and then the other experimenter performs the same or a different measurement? In any case, what happens when a measurement is performed depends on your choice of interpretation; quantum mechanics says only that:
1) The result of the measurement will be an eigenvalue of the operator corresponding to the property we measure.
2) The subsequent evolution of the system will be as if the measurement had changed the particle's state to the corresponding eigenfunction of that operator.
These are sufficient to answer what happens when you have two observers making two measurements.
 
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  • #3
Nugatory said:
I'm not sure why you are specifying two experimenters instead of one.

Maybe that was a needless complication of the questions. I was anticipating on asking a follow-up question, being: if the experimenters (of the same experiment!) are individually entangled with the measurement apparatus and in superposition as a result of that, how come they always agree about the outcome of the experiment. (I now seems a pretty odd question to me... :wink: )
 
  • #4
Nugatory said:
2) The subsequent evolution of the system will be as if the measurement had changed the particle's state to the corresponding eigenfunction of that operator.

I will be using some strange layman language now. Suppose we consider the lightcone propagating through the measurement apparatus. Consider cone C1 after time t=1 of the measurement and cone C2 after time t=2. C1 is a subset of C2. Now if C2 has evolved as if the particle has taken on it's eigenstate, C1 has too. We can take a subset of C1 and it will have evolved as is the particle has that eigenstate too, et cetera. So every part of the apparatus inside the lightcone of the measurement will behave as if the particle in fact has taken on that eigenfunction. So is the measurement yielding a completely deterministic result hen? If I am talking rubbish don't hesitate to tell me so. :wink:
 
  • #5
entropy1 said:
if the experimenters (of the same experiment!) are individually entangled with the measurement apparatus
The entire concept is meaningless because there's no such thing as "individual" entanglement. If you are choosing an interpretation that takes you down this path at all, then there is just one quantum system consisting (in this case) of a particle, two sets of experimental apparatuses, and two experimenters. When we say that the particle and the instruments are entangled, we're just saying that the possible states for that system are "particle is spin-up, observer one sees his apparatus reading spin-up, observer two sees his apparatus reading spin-up" and "particle is spin-down, observer one sees his apparatus reading spin-down, observer two see his apparatus reading spin-down" so the results are always properly correlated. (In practice, decoherence will very rapidly kill any macroscopic superposition of these two states).
 
  • #6
entropy1 said:
I will be using some strange layman language now. Suppose we consider the lightcone propagating through the measurement apparatus. Consider cone C1 after time t=1 of the measurement and cone C2 after time t=2. C1 is a subset of C2. Now if C2 has evolved as if the particle has taken on it's eigenstate, C1 has too. We can take a subset of C1 and it will have evolved as is the particle has that eigenstate too, et cetera. So every part of the apparatus inside the lightcone of the measurement will behave as if the particle in fact has taken on that eigenfunction. So is the measurement yielding a completely deterministic result then? If I am talking rubbish don't hesitate to tell me so. :wink:

You have the relationship backwards - C2 is a subset of C1. You should be thinking of the measurement at t=1 as the preparation procedure for the measurement at t=2.

With that said, there are several ways that indeterminacy enters into the picture.
1) The result of the measurement at T1 may, depending on how the particle was prepared, yield any of the possible eigenvalues of whatever we're measuring and leaving the particle in any of the possible corresponding eigenstates. That's the preparation procedure for the second measurement.
2) If whatever we're measuring at time t=1 does not commute with the Hamiltonian, then the particle will not stay in the eigenstate it entered at t=1, so by time t=2 even a second measurement of the same property will not deterministically produce the same result. (Any interaction with random air molecules or light that happens to be bouncing around the lab falls under this case).
3) If the observable that we're measuring at t=2 does not commute with the observable that we measured at t=1, then the result of the second measurement is necessarily not deterministic; the eigenstates of one are superpositions of the eigenstates of the other.
 
  • #7
So decoherence (in the apparatus/environment) is (equivalent to) a series measurements that do not commute?
 
  • #8
entropy1 said:
So decoherence (in the apparatus/environment) is (equivalent to) a series measurements that do not commute?

No. And how you arrive at such has me beat. As I said replying to another post of yours you need to put some thought into what you say.

Thanks
Bill
 
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  • #9
bhobba said:
No. And how you arrive at such has me beat. As I said replying to another post of yours you need to put some thought into what you say.

I came to it as result from reading this from Nugatory:
Nugatory said:
3) If the observable that we're measuring at t=2 does not commute with the observable that we measured at t=1, then the result of the second measurement is necessarily not deterministic; the eigenstates of one are superpositions of the eigenstates of the other.

However, he put an 'if' in front of it. I don't understand under which circumstances that 'if' is effective.

In the future, I will try to put some more thought in my questions.
 
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  • #10
entropy1 said:
I came to it as result from reading this from Nugatory:

I simply can't follow the logic of that conclusion. Your reasoning totally escaprs me - if you can post more detail that would really help.

Thanks
Bill
 
  • #11
entropy1 said:
In the future, I will try to put some more thought in my questions.

:smile::smile::smile::smile::smile::smile::smile:

Thanks - much appreciated. It wasn't meant as a put down - its just I was unable to follow your reasoning in this and another thread. Giving the chain of that reasoning not only helps others following it, but organises your thoughts a well.

Thanks
Bill
 
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  • #12
entropy1 said:
However, he put an 'if' in front of it. I don't understand under which circumstances that 'if' is effective.

Actually I am not sure I agree with that. I am thinking of wave-packet spreading as the result of a position measurement. It starts out in an eigenstate of position but later isn't. In principle one could devise an observation to detect that state so give a dead cert as the outcome.

However knowing Nugatory I suspect I am misinterpreting what he is saying and may feel a total fool when it's pointed out :nb):nb):nb):nb):nb):nb):nb)

Thanks
Bill
 
  • #13
bhobba said:
I am thinking of wave-packet spreading as the result of a position measurement. It starts out in an eigenstate of position but later isn't. In principle one could devise an observation to detect that state so give a dead cert as the outcome.
That's an example of #2: The position operator does not commute with the Hamiltonian, so if I were to measure the position at t=0 and get a result corresponding to a particular eigenstate of the position operator the particle will not stay in that eigenstate. Instead the state will spread out, evolving over time into a superposition of position eigenstates, so that when I make another position measurement at t=2 the outcome will not be certain.

(Because of the continuous spectrum there are some serious mathematical difficulties with this particular example - let's ignore them for now).
 
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  • #14
entropy1 said:
However, he put an 'if' in front of it. I don't understand under which circumstances that 'if' is effective.
It's your thought experiment and you're the one who is asking about making two measurements. It makes a difference whether the two measurements are of commuting observables or not, and whether the first observable we're measuring commutes with the Hamiltonian or not.

entropy1 said:
So decoherence (in the apparatus/environment) is (equivalent to) a series measurements that do not commute?
No, and they are completely different things.
 
  • #15
Ok, there seem to be a lot of misunderstandings going on here. This thread may be closed.

If anything, I now know I don't understand anything at all anymore. Maybe I'll just leave it.
 
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Related to Questions about measurement of a particle in superposition

1. What is superposition in particle measurement?

Superposition is a concept in quantum mechanics where a particle exists in multiple states simultaneously until it is measured or observed. This means that the particle has a probability of being in multiple locations or having multiple properties at the same time.

2. How is a particle in superposition measured?

To measure a particle in superposition, a device called a quantum measurement apparatus is used. This device interacts with the particle and causes its wave function to collapse, resulting in a single measurable state.

3. Can the measurement of a particle in superposition ever be predicted?

No, the measurement of a particle in superposition cannot be predicted with certainty. The outcome of the measurement is probabilistic, meaning that it is impossible to know the exact state of the particle before it is measured.

4. What is the significance of measuring a particle in superposition?

Measuring a particle in superposition allows scientists to study and understand the behavior of quantum systems. This has implications in various fields such as quantum computing and cryptography.

5. Are there any limitations to measuring a particle in superposition?

Yes, there are limitations to measuring a particle in superposition. The act of measuring the particle causes its state to collapse, making it impossible to observe its full superposition state. Additionally, certain properties of a particle, such as its position and momentum, cannot be measured accurately at the same time due to the Heisenberg uncertainty principle.

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