Observing controlled quantum state collapse in a single quantum trajectory of a mechanical oscillator
A. A. Gangat

TL;DR
This paper proposes a feasible optomechanical scheme to observe quantum state collapse in a mechanical oscillator, enabling fundamental tests of quantum measurement effects without assuming the projection postulate.
Contribution
It introduces a novel energy variance probing method in a mechanical system to experimentally verify quantum state collapse dynamics.
Findings
Numerical simulations predict a decrease in energy variance with increased measurement strength.
The scheme allows in situ control of the mechanical wave function's variance.
The approach enables fundamental tests of quantum measurement theories in mechanical systems.
Abstract
A fundamental prediction of quantum theory that is derived from the "projection postulate" is that under continuous measurement, the state of a system traces out a "quantum trajectory" in time that depends upon its measurement record, and that in certain situations, the quantum state of a system stochastically collapses at a finite rate toward a random eigenstate. On the other hand, quantum theory also predicts that environmental coupling produces the opposite effect of spreading the wave function into a mixed state. Studying the effect of these two competing processes, as the ratio of their strengths is varied, on the distribution of a quantum state is of fundamental interest in any setting, but especially so in the mechanical realm. A key issue, however, is that a fundamental study of such physics can not entail an a priori assumption of the projection postulate itself, and Bayesian…
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