History operators in quantum mechanics
Leonardo Castellani

TL;DR
This paper introduces the concept of history operators in quantum mechanics, offering a computationally advantageous framework that generalizes path integrals and clarifies issues of nonlocality and collapse.
Contribution
It proposes a novel history operator formalism that encodes measurement sequences and evolution, providing new insights into quantum measurement and nonlocality.
Findings
History operators encode measurement sequences and evolution.
Collapse modifies history operators without violating causality.
Formalism reproduces known quantum results and clarifies nonlocality issues.
Abstract
It is convenient to describe a quantum system at all times by means of a "history operator" , encoding measurements and unitary time evolution between measurements. These operators naturally arise when computing the probability of measurement sequences, and generalize the "sum over position histories " of the Feynman path-integral. As we argue in the present note, this description has some computational advantages over the usual state vector description, and may help to clarify some issues regarding nonlocality of quantum correlations and collapse. A measurement on a system described by modifies the history operator, , where is the projector corresponding to the measurement. We refer to this modification as "history operator collapse". Thus keeps track of the succession of measurements on a system, and contains all histories compatible with the results…
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