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3.3. Non-projective state update: atomic instruments
In general, the statistical properties of any measurement are characterized by
- the output probability distribution
, the probability distribution of the output
of the measurement in the input state
;
- the quantum state reduction
,the state change from the input state
to the output state
conditional upon the outcome
of the measurement.
In von Neumann’s formulation, the statistical properties of any measurement of an observable is uniquely determined by Born’s rule (5) and the projection postulate (6), and they are represented by the map (9), an instrument of von Neumann type. However, von Neumann’s formulation does not reflect the fact that the same observable
represented by the Hermitian operator
in
can be measured in many ways.8 Formally, such measurement-schemes are represented by quantum instruments.
Now, we consider the simplest quantum instruments of non von Neumann type, known as atomic instruments. We start with recollection of the notion of POVM (probability operator valued measure); we restrict considerations to POVMs with a discrete domain of definition
. POVM is a map
such that for each
,
is a positive contractive Hermitian operator (called effect) (i.e.,
or any
), and the normalization condition
holds, where
is the unit operator. It is assumed that for any measurement, the output probability distribution
is given by
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where
is a POVM. For atomic instruments, it is assumed that effects are represented concretely in the form
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where
is a linear operator in
. Hence, the normalization condition has the form
.9 The Born rule can be written similarly to (5):
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It is assumed that the post-measurement state transformation is based on the map:
*
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so the quantum state reduction is given by
*
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The map
given by (13) is an atomic quantum instrument. We remark that the Born rule (12) can be written in the form
*
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Let
be a Hermitian operator in
. Consider a POVM
with the domain of definition given by the spectrum of
. This POVM represents a measurement of observable
if Born’s rule holds:
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Thus, in principle, probabilities of outcomes are still encoded in the spectral decomposition of operator
or in other words operators
should be selected in such a way that they generate the probabilities corresponding to the spectral decomposition of the symbolic representation
of observables
, i.e.,
is uniquely determined by
as
. We can say that this operator carries only information about the probabilities of outcomes, in contrast to the von Neumann scheme, operator
does not encode the rule of the state update. For an atomic instrument, measurements of the observable
has the unique output probability distribution by the Born’s rule (16), but has many different quantum state reductions depending of the decomposition of the effect
in such a way that
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