Understanding the Pointer States
Carlos Alexandre Brasil, Leonardo Andreta de Castro

TL;DR
This paper reviews the concept of pointer states in quantum mechanics, explaining their emergence through decoherence, and discusses their role in measurement, using a simple model involving two-level systems and an environment.
Contribution
It provides a clear, accessible review of pointer states, their theoretical foundations, and their limitations in the context of quantum measurement.
Findings
Pointer states emerge through decoherence in a simple two-level system model.
Decoherence explains how classical measurement outcomes arise from quantum systems.
Pointer states have limitations in fully resolving measurement problems.
Abstract
In quantum mechanics, pointer states are eigenstates of the observable of the measurement apparatus that represent the possible positions of the display pointer of the equipment. The origin of this concept lies in attempts to fill the blanks in the Everett's relative-state interpretation, and to make it a fully valid description of physical reality. To achieve this, it was necessary to consider not only the main system interacting with the measurement apparatus (like von Neumann and Everett did) but also the role of the environment in eliminating correlations between different possible measurements when interacting with the measurement apparatus. The interaction of the environment with the main system (and the measurement apparatus) is the core of the decoherence theory, which followed Everett's thesis. In this article, we review the measurement process according to von Neumann,…
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