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The Quantum Theory That Peels Away the Mystery of Measurement
Quanta Magazine ^ | 7/3/19 | Phillip Ball

Posted on 07/14/2019 5:55:29 AM PDT by LibWhacker

A recent test has confirmed the predictions of quantum trajectory theory, which describes what happens during the long-mysterious “collapse” of a quantum system.

Imagine if all our scientific theories and models told us only about averages: if the best weather forecasts could only give you the average daily amount of rain expected over the next month, or if astronomers could only predict the average time between solar eclipses.

In the early days of quantum mechanics, that seemed to be its inevitable limitation: It was a probabilistic theory, telling us only what we will observe on average if we collect records for many events or particles. To Erwin Schrödinger, whose eponymous equation prescribes how quantum objects behave, it was utterly meaningless to think about specific atoms or electrons doing things in real time. “It is fair to state,” he wrote in 1952, “that we are not experimenting with single particles. … We are scrutinizing records of events long after they have happened.” In other words, quantum mechanics seemed to work only for “ensembles” of many particles. “When the ensemble is large enough, it’s possible to acquire sufficient statistics to check if the predictions are correct or not,” said Michel Devoret, a physicist at Yale University.

But there’s another way to formulate quantum mechanics so that it can speak about single events happening in individual quantum systems. It is called quantum trajectory theory (QTT), and it’s perfectly compatible with the standard formalism of quantum mechanics — it’s really just a more detailed view of quantum behavior. The standard description is recovered over long timescales after the average of many events is computed.

In a direct challenge to Schrödinger’s pessimistic view, “QTT deals precisely with single particles and with events right as they are happening,” said Zlatko Minev, who completed his doctorate in Devoret’s lab at Yale. By applying QTT to an experiment on a quantum circuit, Minev and his co-workers were recently able to capture a “quantum leap” — a switch between two quantum energy states — as it unfolded over time. They were also to achieve the remarkable feat of catching such a jump in midflight and reversing it.

“Quantum trajectory theory makes predictions that are impossible to make with the standard formulation,” Devoret said. In particular, it can predict how individual quantum objects such as particles will behave when they are observed — that’s to say, when measurements are made on them.

Schrödinger’s equation can’t do that. It predicts perfectly how an object will evolve over time if we don’t measure it. But add in measurement and all you can get from the Schrödinger equation is a prediction of what you’ll see on average over many measurements, not what any individual system will do. It won’t tell you what to expect from a lone quantum jump, for example.

Measurement derails the Schrödinger equation because of a peculiar phenomenon called quantum back-action. A quantum measurement influences the system being observed: The act of observation injects a kind of random noise into the system. This is ultimately the source of Heisenberg’s famous uncertainty principle. The uncertainty in a measurement is not, as Heisenberg initially thought, an effect of clumsy intervention in a delicate quantum system — a photon striking a particle and pushing it off course, say. Rather, it’s an unavoidable outcome of the intrinsically randomizing effect of observation itself. The Schrödinger equation does just fine at predicting how a quantum system evolves — unless you measure it, in which case the result is unpredictable.

Abstractions​ navigates promising ideas in science and mathematics. Journey with us and join the conversation. See all Abstractions blog Quantum back-action can be thought of as an imperfect alignment between the system and the measuring apparatus, Devoret said, because you don’t know what the system is like until you look. He compares it to an observation of a planet using a telescope. If the planet isn’t quite in the center of the telescope’s frame, the image will be fuzzy.

QTT, however, can take back-action into account. The catch is that, to apply QTT, you need to have nearly complete knowledge about the behavior of the system you’re observing. Normally, an observation of a quantum system overlooks a lot of potentially available information: Some emitted photons get lost in their environment, say. But if pretty much everything is measured and known about the system — including the random consequences of the back-action — then you can build feedback into the measurement apparatus that will make continuous adjustments to compensate for the back-action. It’s equivalent to adjusting the telescope’s orientation to keep the planet in the center.

For this to work, the measurement apparatus has to collect data faster than the rate at which the system undergoes significant change, and it has to do so with nearly perfect efficiency. “Essentially all the information leaving the system and being absorbed by the environment must pass through the measurement apparatus and be recorded,” Devoret said. In the astronomical analogy, the planet would have to be illuminated only by light coming from the observatory, which would somehow also collect all the light that’s reemitted.

Achieving this degree of control and information capture is very challenging. That’s why, although QTT has been around for a couple decades, “it is only within the past five years that we can experimentally test it,” said William Oliver of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Minev developed innovations to ensure quantum-measurement efficiencies of up to 91%, and “this key technological development is what allowed us to turn the prediction into a verifiable, implementable experiment,” he said.

With these innovations, “it’s possible to know at all times where the system is, given its recent past history, even if some features of the motion are rendered unpredictable in the long term,” Devoret said. What’s more, this near-complete knowledge of how the system changes smoothly over time allows researchers to “rewind the tape” and avoid the apparently irreversible “wave function collapse” of the standard quantum formalism. That’s how the researchers were able to reverse a quantum jump in midflight.

RELATED: Quantum Leaps, Long Assumed to Be Instantaneous, Take Time Mysterious Quantum Rule Reconstructed From Scratch Real-Life Schrödinger’s Cats Probe the Boundary of the Quantum World The excellent agreement between the predictions of QTT and the experimental results suggests something deeper than the mere fact that the theory works for single quantum systems. It means that the highly abstract “quantum trajectory” that the theory refers to (a term coined in the 1990s by physicist Howard Carmichael, a coauthor of the Yale paper) is a meaningful entity — in Minev’s words, it “can be ascribed a degree of reality.” This contrasts with the common view when QTT was first introduced, which held that it was just a mathematical tool with no clear physical significance.

But what exactly is this trajectory? One thing is clear: It’s not like a classical trajectory, meaning a path taken in space. It’s more like the path taken through the abstract space of possible states the system might have, which is called Hilbert space. In traditional quantum theory, that path is described by the wave function of the Schrödinger equation. But crucially, QTT can also address how measurements affect that path, which the Schrödinger equation can’t do. In effect, the theory uses careful and complete observations of the way the system has behaved so far to predict what it will do in the future.

You might loosely compare this to forecasting the trajectory of a single air molecule. The Schrödinger equation plays a role a bit like the classical diffusion equation, which predicts how far on average such a particle travels over time as it undergoes collisions. But QTT predicts where a specific particle will go, basing its forecast on detailed information about the collisions the particle has experienced already. Randomness is still at play: You can’t perfectly predict a trajectory in either case. But QTT will give you the story of an individual particle — and the ability to see where it might be headed next.


TOPICS: Science
KEYWORDS: measurement; quantum; quantumtheory; stringtheory; theory; trajectory
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There it is. Don't ask me to explain it because I can't.

Some interesting comments at the source. I read them hoping they would help clear up some things for me, but they actually made it worse, lol. ymmv

1 posted on 07/14/2019 5:55:29 AM PDT by LibWhacker
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To: LibWhacker

Let me digest for a few.


2 posted on 07/14/2019 5:57:59 AM PDT by devane617 (Text me when someone on the Left is perp walked. Now, back to watching Lassie...)
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To: LibWhacker

QTT discovers statistical modeling.


3 posted on 07/14/2019 6:05:40 AM PDT by Deaf Smith (When a Texan takes his chances, chances will be taken that's fore sure)
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To: LibWhacker

Some people think a cat shoved into a box can be both alive and dead at the same time. It is impossible for a logical person to have a conversation with those people.

I operate under the principle that a statement is either true or false, and that there is no middle ground between true and false. There is no basis for common understanding with people who reject that principle, and so it is impossible to talk with them about anything.


4 posted on 07/14/2019 6:09:39 AM PDT by I want the USA back (The further a society drifts from the truth, the more it will hate those who speak it. Orwell.)
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To: LibWhacker

I was just saying that at a cocktail part last night.

Until everybody walked away.


5 posted on 07/14/2019 6:23:06 AM PDT by Larry Lucido
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To: LibWhacker

QTT, however, can take back-action into account. The catch is that, to apply QTT, you need to have nearly complete knowledge about the behavior of the system you’re observing. Normally, an observation of a quantum system overlooks a lot of potentially available information: Some emitted photons get lost in their environment, say. But if pretty much everything is measured and known about the system — including the random consequences of the back-action — then you can build feedback into the measurement apparatus that will make continuous adjustments to compensate for the back-action. It’s equivalent to adjusting the telescope’s orientation to keep the planet in the center.

...

They must keep track of effects that go backwards in time.

See Wheeler’s delayed choice experiment:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wheeler%27s_delayed-choice_experiment


6 posted on 07/14/2019 6:24:07 AM PDT by Moonman62 (Charity comes from wealth.)
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To: Deaf Smith

The catch is that, to apply QTT, you need to have nearly complete knowledge about the behavior of the system you’re observing.

...

The key is complete knowledge of the system.


7 posted on 07/14/2019 6:26:53 AM PDT by Moonman62 (Charity comes from wealth.)
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To: LibWhacker

It means if “you are one with the cat”, you’ll know if it’s dead or not.


8 posted on 07/14/2019 6:29:18 AM PDT by Track9
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To: I want the USA back

We simply do not know if the cat is alive or dead until we open the box.

I read a story once where a team set up a Schrödinger’s cat experiment, and when they opened the box, found that the cat had disappeared (he did not like being shut into a box).

This article implies that we should be able to predict with high certainty whether the cat will be alive or dead. I don’t see where the uncertainty is being eliminated, just that correction factors are being applied.


9 posted on 07/14/2019 6:30:29 AM PDT by exDemMom (Current visual of the hole the US continues to dig itself into: http://www.usdebtclock.org/)
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To: I want the USA back

It is a true statement that barring direct observation of data, the cat Might be alive or Might be dead, but it is certainly never true that it can be both.

It is modeling along those lines of thinking, that we are seeing breakthru’s on quantum computing(which is up to 8 Qbits now when last I checked). Shrodinger’s cat paradox has often been taken to ridiculous extremes, it’s more about predicted behavior of subparticles as various points in time and how to corral such behaviors into doing useful work such as creating extremely fast and powerful computers with them.


10 posted on 07/14/2019 6:37:23 AM PDT by mdmathis6
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To: I want the USA back

Heisenberg moved the cat. Or maybe the box.


11 posted on 07/14/2019 6:43:14 AM PDT by sasquatch
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To: LibWhacker

observations + effects of measurement + feedback = accurate predictions of future path


12 posted on 07/14/2019 6:44:30 AM PDT by mjp ((pro-{God, reality, reason, egoism, individualism, natural rights, limited government, capitalism}))
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To: I want the USA back
"I operate under the principle that a statement is either true or false, and that there is no middle ground between true and false. There is no basis for common understanding with people who reject that principle, and so it is impossible to talk with them about anything."

That'll get you through life just fine.

But it turns out that, unfortunately, the real world just isn't that simple.

BTW, great tagline!

13 posted on 07/14/2019 6:53:20 AM PDT by MV=PY (The Magic Question: Who's paying for it?)
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To: LibWhacker; Moonman62; Texas Fossil; Phinneous
Minev and his co-workers were recently able to capture a “quantum leap” — a switch between two quantum energy states — as it unfolded over time.

"That's one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind."

They were also to achieve the remarkable feat of catching such a jump in midflight and reversing it.

Or the remarkable feat of catching a lady in mid-spin and reversing her:

A quantum measurement influences the system being observed: The act of observation injects a kind of random noise into the system. This is ultimately the source of Heisenberg’s famous uncertainty principle. The uncertainty in a measurement is not, as Heisenberg initially thought, an effect of clumsy intervention in a delicate quantum system — a photon striking a particle and pushing it off course, say. Rather, it’s an unavoidable outcome of the intrinsically randomizing effect of observation itself. The Schrödinger equation does just fine at predicting how a quantum system evolves — unless you measure it, in which case the result is unpredictable.

Without the indefinite article, there is no clear distintinction between "man" and "mankind", so you can trick your perception into observing small steps or quantum leaps. Out of many, one.

Acts 2:1 And when the day of the 50th was fully come, they were all with one accord in one place.

It "just so happens" that the Washington Monument is about to reopen with a new elevator system. Nothing random about that.

Living parables for the win!

14 posted on 07/14/2019 6:53:42 AM PDT by Ezekiel (The pun is mightier than the s-word. Goy to the World!)
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To: Larry Lucido
So it was you. We all asked each other how you got invited to the party and no one knew.

/jk

15 posted on 07/14/2019 7:05:19 AM PDT by BipolarBob (Heaven has gates, walls and immigration policy but Hell has an open border policy. Food for thought.)
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To: BipolarBob

:-)

I figured it was because they brought out those little sandwiches...


16 posted on 07/14/2019 7:11:25 AM PDT by Larry Lucido
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To: Moonman62

Kinda makes sense. If you have a tightly bound system of the very smallest things, using any of those smallest things to provide a “measurement” is going mess with the alignment of the entire system. Hence the “collapse of the wave function.”


17 posted on 07/14/2019 7:46:04 AM PDT by glorgau
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To: Ezekiel

The twirling lady is a good demonstrator of cognitive bias.


18 posted on 07/14/2019 7:55:59 AM PDT by Moonman62 (Charity comes from wealth.)
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To: Moonman62

“The key is complete knowledge of the system.”

If you know that a priori why do you need to measure anything?


19 posted on 07/14/2019 9:01:16 AM PDT by aquila48
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To: mdmathis6

“the cat Might be alive or Might be dead, but it is certainly never true that it can be both.”

Was the cat sick before he got put in the box? Was there food and water in the box?


20 posted on 07/14/2019 9:06:38 AM PDT by aquila48
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