A Generalization of the Functional Calculus of Observables and Notion of Joint Measurability to the Case of Non-commuting Observables
Richard DeJonghe, Kimberly Frey, Tom Imbo

TL;DR
This paper extends the functional calculus and joint measurement concepts to non-commuting quantum observables with pure point spectra, enabling approximate simultaneous measurements and a generalized observable construction.
Contribution
It introduces a joint observable for non-commuting observables and develops a generalized functional calculus with notable properties.
Findings
Constructed joint observable for non-commuting observables
Developed a generalized functional calculus for observables
Enabled approximate simultaneous measurements
Abstract
For any pair of bounded observables and with pure point spectra, we construct an associated "joint observable" which gives rise to a notion of a joint (projective) measurement of and , and which conforms to the intuition that one can measure non-commuting observables simultaneously, provided one is willing to give up arbitrary precision. As an application, we show how our notion of a joint observable naturally allows for a construction of a "functional calculus," so that for any pair of observables and as above, and any (Borel measurable) function , a new "generalized observable" is obtained. Moreover, we show that this new functional calculus has some rather remarkable properties.
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