Lectures on dynamical models for quantum measurements
Theo M. Nieuwenhuizen, Marti Perarnau-Llobet, Roger Balian

TL;DR
This paper analyzes quantum measurement as an interaction process within standard quantum mechanics, deriving textbook postulates and explaining the measurement problem through a detailed dynamical model involving a spin system and a macroscopic apparatus.
Contribution
It provides a dynamical model of quantum measurement that derives the collapse postulate and addresses the measurement problem within standard quantum mechanics.
Findings
Disappearance of off-diagonal density matrix terms due to apparatus interaction
Classical registration features emerge from large pointer variables
Measurement outcomes are explained as selected runs within the quantum framework
Abstract
In textbooks, ideal quantum measurements are described in terms of the tested system only by the collapse postulate and Born's rule. This level of description offers a rather flexible position for the interpretation of quantum mechanics. Here we analyse an ideal measurement as a process of interaction between the tested system S and an apparatus A, so as to derive the properties postulated in textbooks. We thus consider within standard quantum mechanics the measurement of a quantum spin component by an apparatus A, being a magnet coupled to a bath. We first consider the evolution of the density operator of S+A describing a large set of runs of the measurement process. The approach describes the disappearance of the off-diagonal terms ("truncation") of the density matrix as a physical effect due to A, while the registration of the outcome has classical features due to the…
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