Macroscopic observables and the Born rule
N.P. Landsman

TL;DR
This paper derives the Born rule within the Copenhagen Interpretation by linking classical concepts to quantum observables using C*-algebras, avoiding circular reasoning and controversial assumptions.
Contribution
It provides a mathematically refined derivation of the Born rule from classical concepts, replacing previous flawed approaches with continuous fields of C*-algebras.
Findings
Born probabilities as relative frequencies in measurements
Circumvents circularity and mathematical flaws of earlier derivations
Avoids reliance on the eigenvector-eigenvalue link
Abstract
We clarify the role of the Born rule in the Copenhagen Interpretation of quantum mechanics by deriving it from Bohr's doctrine of classical concepts, translated into the following mathematical statement: a quantum system described by a noncommutative C*-algebra of observables is empirically accessible only through associated commutative C*-algebras. The Born probabilities emerge as the relative frequencies of outcomes in long runs of measurements on a quantum system; it is not necessary to adopt the frequency interpretation of single-case probabilities (which will be the subject of a sequel paper). Our derivation of the Born rule uses ideas from a program begun by Finkelstein (1965) and Hartle (1968), intending to remove the Born rule as a separate postulate of quantum mechanics. Mathematically speaking, our approach refines previous elaborations of this program - notably the one due to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Mechanics and Applications · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Noncommutative and Quantum Gravity Theories
