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The physical state of a quantum system

The physical state of a quantum system is represented by a vector denoted

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which is a column vector, whose components are probability amplitudes for different states in which the system might be found if a measurement were made on it.

A probability amplitude tex2html_wrap_inline237 is a complex number, the square modulus of which gives the corresponding probability tex2html_wrap_inline239

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The number of components of tex2html_wrap_inline241 is equal to the number of possible states in which the system might observed. The space that contains tex2html_wrap_inline241 is called a Hilbert space tex2html_wrap_inline245 . The dimension of tex2html_wrap_inline245 is also equal to the number of states in which the system might be observed. It could be finite or infinite (countable or not).

tex2html_wrap_inline241 must be a unit vector. This means that the inner product:

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In the above, if the vector tex2html_wrap_inline241 , known as a Dirac ``ket'' vector, is given by the column

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then the vector tex2html_wrap_inline253 , known as a Dirac ``bra'' vector, is given by

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so that the inner product becomes

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We can understand the meaning of this by noting that tex2html_wrap_inline255 , the components of the state vector, are probability amplitudes, and tex2html_wrap_inline257 are the corresponding probabilities. The above condition then implies that the sum of all the probabilities of being in the various possible states is 1, which we know must be true for probabilities.



Mark Tuckerman
Wed Mar 10 13:14:21 EST 1999