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Classical interventions in quantum systems. I. The measuring process

Quantum Physics 2009-10-31 v3

Abstract

The measuring process is an external intervention in the dynamics of a quantum system. It involves a unitary interaction of that system with a measuring apparatus, a further interaction of both with an unknown environment causing decoherence, and then the deletion of a subsystem. This description of the measuring process is a substantial generalization of current models in quantum measurement theory. In particular, no ancilla is needed. The final result is represented by a completely positive map of the quantum state ρ\rho (possibly with a change of the dimensions of ρ\rho). A continuous limit of the above process leads to Lindblad's equation for the quantum dynamical semigroup.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.quant-ph/9906023,
  title  = {Classical interventions in quantum systems. I. The measuring process},
  author = {Asher Peres},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:quant-ph/9906023},
  year   = {2009}
}

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Final version, 14 pages LaTeX