New wine in old bottles: Quantum measurement - direct, indirect, weak - with some applications
Bengt E. Y. Svensson

TL;DR
This paper provides a comprehensive, pedagogical overview of quantum measurement theory with a focus on weak measurement and post-selection, demystifying their formalism and exploring applications like Leggett-Garg inequalities.
Contribution
It develops the formalism of weak measurement to second order and connects it to the master equation, clarifying the theoretical basis and applications of weak values in quantum mechanics.
Findings
Derived the second-order formalism for weak measurement.
Connected weak measurement formalism to the master equation.
Discussed experimental implications and interpretations of weak values.
Abstract
In this, partly pedagogical review, I attempt to give a self-contained overview of the basis of (non-relativistic) QM measurement theory expressed in density matrix formalism. The focus is on applications to the theory of weak measurement, as developed by Aharonov and Vaidman and their collaborators. Their development of weak measurement combined with what they call 'post-selection' - judiciously choosing not only the initial state of a system ('pre-selection') but also its final state - has received much attention recently. Not the least has it opened up new, fruitful experimental vistas, like novel approaches to amplification. But the approach has also attached to it some air of mystery. I will attempt to 'de-mystify' it by showing that (almost) all results can be derived in a straight-forward way from conventional QM. Among other things, I develop the formalism not only to first…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Mechanics and Applications · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Advanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics
