Definition and Basic Concepts
Concept of Quantum State
Quantum state: complete description of a quantum system's physical condition. Encodes all measurable information. Not directly observable but inferred via measurement statistics.
State Vector and Postulates
Represented by state vector |ψ⟩ in complex vector space. Postulates: states belong to Hilbert space; physical observables correspond to operators; measurement collapses state.
Pure vs Mixed States
Pure states: maximal knowledge, represented by single vector. Mixed states: statistical mixtures, described by density matrices.
Wavefunction Description
Definition
Wavefunction ψ(x,t): complex function encoding probability amplitude. |ψ(x,t)|² = probability density of finding particle at x, time t.
Normalization
Integral over all space |ψ(x,t)|² dx = 1. Ensures total probability unity.
Physical Interpretation
Born rule: measurement outcomes probabilistic, probabilities given by squared modulus of wavefunction.
Example: Particle in a Box
Stationary states ψ_n(x) = sqrt(2/L) sin(nπx/L). Energy quantized. Demonstrates discrete quantum states.
ψ_n(x) = √(2/L) sin(nπx/L), n = 1, 2, 3, ... Hilbert Space Formalism
Abstract Vector Space
Hilbert space: complete inner product space over complex numbers. States as vectors; observables as linear operators.
Inner Product
Defines probability amplitudes: ⟨φ|ψ⟩ complex number. Norm: ⟨ψ|ψ⟩ = 1 for normalized states.
Orthonormal Basis
Set of vectors {|e_i⟩} with ⟨e_i|e_j⟩ = δ_ij. Any state |ψ⟩ = ∑ c_i |e_i⟩, coefficients c_i = ⟨e_i|ψ⟩.
Completeness Relation
∑ |e_i⟩⟨e_i| = I, identity operator.
∑_i |e_i⟩⟨e_i| = I Superposition Principle
Definition
Any linear combination of quantum states is a valid state. |ψ⟩ = a|φ⟩ + b|χ⟩ with complex coefficients a,b.
Interference Effects
Superposition leads to interference patterns in measurements. Basis of quantum interference phenomena.
Examples
Double-slit experiment: particle wavefunction as superposition of paths. Spin states: superposition of spin-up and spin-down.
Eigenstates and Observables
Observables as Operators
Physical quantities represented by Hermitian operators. Eigenvalues: measurable values. Eigenstates: states with definite measurement outcomes.
Eigenvalue Equation
A|a⟩ = a|a⟩, where A is observable, a eigenvalue, and |a⟩ eigenstate.
Measurement Postulate
Measurement collapses state onto eigenstate of observable measured. Outcome probabilistic with probability |⟨a|ψ⟩|².
Degeneracy
Multiple eigenstates share same eigenvalue; degeneracy affects measurement statistics.
| Operator | Eigenstates | Eigenvalues |
|---|---|---|
| Spin operator S_z | |↑⟩, |↓⟩ | +ħ/2, -ħ/2 |
Quantum Measurement
Collapse of the Wavefunction
Measurement forces state into eigenstate of observable. Non-unitary, instantaneous process.
Probability of Outcomes
Given by projection: P(a) = |⟨a|ψ⟩|². Normalization ensures total probability 1.
Measurement Operators
Set of measurement operators {M_m} satisfying completeness: ∑ M_m† M_m = I.
Projective and POVM Measurements
Projective: orthogonal projectors, ideal measurements. POVM: generalized measurement operators, include noise.
Density Matrix and Mixed States
Definition
Density matrix ρ = ∑ p_i |ψ_i⟩⟨ψ_i| represents statistical mixture of states. Pure state: ρ = |ψ⟩⟨ψ|.
Properties
Hermitian, positive semi-definite, trace one. Encodes all measurable statistics.
Purity
Purity Tr(ρ²) = 1 for pure states; < 1 for mixed states.
Evolution
Density matrices evolve via von Neumann equation: iħ dρ/dt = [H, ρ].
iħ (dρ/dt) = Hρ - ρH Quantum Entanglement
Definition
Non-classical correlation between quantum states of subsystems. Cannot be factored into product states.
Bell States
Maximally entangled two-qubit states forming basis of entanglement studies.
Entanglement Measures
Concurrence, entanglement entropy quantify degree of entanglement.
Applications
Quantum computing, teleportation, cryptography rely on entanglement.
| Bell State | State Vector |
|---|---|
| |Φ⁺⟩ | (1/√2)(|00⟩ + |11⟩) |
| |Ψ⁻⟩ | (1/√2)(|01⟩ - |10⟩) |
Quantum Coherence
Definition
Ability of quantum states to exhibit phase relations between basis components. Essential for interference.
Decoherence
Process of coherence loss due to environment-induced interactions. Leads to classical behavior emergence.
Coherence Measures
Off-diagonal elements of density matrix quantify coherence magnitude.
Role in Quantum Technologies
Maintaining coherence critical for quantum computation, communication fidelity.
Time Evolution of States
Schrödinger Equation
Deterministic evolution of pure states: iħ ∂|ψ(t)⟩/∂t = H|ψ(t)⟩, with Hamiltonian H.
Unitary Operators
State evolution via unitary operator U(t) = exp(-iHt/ħ). Preserves norm and probabilities.
Density Matrix Evolution
Von Neumann equation governs mixed states. Open systems may require master equations.
|ψ(t)⟩ = U(t)|ψ(0)⟩ Applications of Quantum States
Quantum Computing
Qubits encoded as quantum states. Superposition and entanglement enable parallelism and speedup.
Quantum Cryptography
Security protocols based on state properties and measurement disturbance.
Quantum Sensing
Enhanced sensitivity exploiting coherence and entanglement.
Quantum Simulation
Modeling complex quantum systems using controllable quantum states.
Experimental Realizations
Trapped Ions
Quantum states encoded in electronic levels, manipulated by lasers.
Superconducting Qubits
Macroscopic quantum states in Josephson junction circuits.
Photonic Systems
Polarization or path states of photons used for quantum information.
Quantum Dots
Electron spin or exciton states in semiconductor nanostructures.
References
- J.J. Sakurai, J. Napolitano, Modern Quantum Mechanics, 2nd ed., Addison-Wesley, 2011, pp. 45-110.
- M.A. Nielsen, I.L. Chuang, Quantum Computation and Quantum Information, Cambridge University Press, 2010, pp. 23-78.
- P.A.M. Dirac, The Principles of Quantum Mechanics, 4th ed., Oxford University Press, 1958, pp. 15-60.
- R.P. Feynman, Quantum Mechanics and Path Integrals, Dover Publications, 2010, pp. 101-155.
- C. Cohen-Tannoudji, B. Diu, F. Laloë, Quantum Mechanics, Wiley-VCH, 2005, vol. 1, pp. 200-265.