Physics:Ensemble interpretation

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The ensemble interpretation of quantum mechanics considers the quantum state description to apply only to an ensemble of similarly prepared systems, rather than supposing that it exhaustively represents an individual physical system.[1]

The advocates of the ensemble interpretation of quantum mechanics claim that it is minimalist, making the fewest physical assumptions about the meaning of the standard mathematical formalism. It proposes to take to the fullest extent the statistical interpretation of Max Born, for which he won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1954.[2] On the face of it, the ensemble interpretation might appear to contradict the doctrine proposed by Niels Bohr, that the wave function describes an individual system or particle, not an ensemble, though he accepted Born's statistical interpretation of quantum mechanics. It is not quite clear exactly what kind of ensemble Bohr intended to exclude, since he did not describe probability in terms of ensembles. The ensemble interpretation is sometimes, especially by its proponents, called "the statistical interpretation",[1] but it seems perhaps different from Born's statistical interpretation.

As is the case for "the" Copenhagen interpretation, "the" ensemble interpretation might not be uniquely defined. In one view, the ensemble interpretation may be defined as that advocated by Leslie E. Ballentine, Professor at Simon Fraser University.[3] His interpretation does not attempt to justify, or otherwise derive, or explain quantum mechanics from any deterministic process, or make any other statement about the real nature of quantum phenomena; it intends simply to interpret the wave function. It does not propose to lead to actual results that differ from orthodox interpretations. It makes the statistical operator primary in reading the wave function, deriving the notion of a pure state from that. In the opinion of Ballentine, perhaps the most notable supporter of such an interpretation was Albert Einstein:

The attempt to conceive the quantum-theoretical description as the complete description of the individual systems leads to unnatural theoretical interpretations, which become immediately unnecessary if one accepts the interpretation that the description refers to ensembles of systems and not to individual systems.
—Albert Einstein[4]

History

In his 1926[5] paper introducing the concept of quantum scattering theory Max Born proposed to view "the motion of the particle follows the laws of probability, but the probability itself propagates in accord with causal laws", where the causal laws are Schrodinger's equations. As related in his 1954 Nobel Prize in Physics lecture [6] Born viewed the statistical character of quantum mechanics as an empirical observation with philosophical implications.

Einstein maintained consistently that the quantum mechanics only supplied a statistical view. In 1936 he wrote "“the [math]\displaystyle{ \psi }[/math] function does not in any way describe a condition which could be that of a single system; it relates rather to many systems, to ‘an ensemble of systems’ in the sense of statistical mechanics.”[7] However Einstein did not provide a detailed study of the ensemble, ultimately because he considered quantum mechanics itself to be incomplete primarily because it was only an ensemble theory.[8] Einstein believed quantum mechanics was correct in the same sense that thermodynamics is correct, but that it was insufficient as means of unifying physics.[9]

Also in the years around 1936, Karl Popper published philosophical studies countering the work of Heisenberg and Bohr. Popper considered their work as essentially subjectivist, unfalsifiable, and thus unscientific. He held that the quantum state represented statistical assertions which have no predictive power for individual particles.[10] Popper described "propensities" as the correct notion of probability for quantum mechanics.

Although several other notable physicists championed the ensemble concept, including John C. Slater, Edwin C. Kemble, and Dmitrii Blokhintsev,[10] Leslie Ballentine's 1970 paper 'The statistical interpretation of quantum mechanics"[11] and his textbook[12] have become the main sources.[8][10] Ballentine followed up with axiomatic development of propensity theory,[13] analysis of decoherence in the ensemble interpretation[14] and other papers spanning 40 years.

States, systems, and ensembles

Perhaps the first expression of an ensemble interpretation was that of Max Born.[5] In a 1968 article, he used the German words 'gleicher Haufen', which are often translated into English, in this context, as 'ensemble' or 'assembly'. The atoms in his assembly were uncoupled, meaning that they were an imaginary set of independent atoms that defines its observable statistical properties. Born did not develop a more detailed specification of ensembles to complete his scattering theory work.

Although Einstein described quantum mechanics as clearly an ensemble theory he did present a formal definition of an ensemble.[15] Einstein sought a theory of individual entities, which he argued was not quantum mechanics.

Ballentine distinguish his particular ensemble interpretation the Statistical Interpretation. According to Ballentine, the distinguishing difference between many of the Copenhagen-like interpretations (CI) and the Statistical Interpretation (EI) is the following:[11]

CI: A pure state provides a complete description of an individual system, e.g. an electron.

EI: A pure state describes the statistical properties of an ensemble of identically prepared systems.

Ballentine defines a quantum state as an ensemble of similarly prepared systems. For example, the system may be a single electron, then the ensemble will "the set of all single electrons which subjected to the same state preparation technique." He uses the example of a low-intensity electron beam prepared with a narrow range of momenta. Each prepared electron is a system, the ensemble consists of many such systems.

Ballentine emphasizes that the meaning of the "Quantum State" or "State Vector" may be described, essentially, by a one-to-one correspondence to the probability distributions of measurement results, not the individual measurement results themselves.[16] A mixed state is a description only of the probabilities, [math]\displaystyle{ \mathcal{P}(\chi_1) }[/math] and [math]\displaystyle{ \mathcal{P}(\chi_2) }[/math] of positions, not a description of actual individual positions. A mixed state is a mixture of probabilities of physical states, not a coherent superposition of physical states.

Probability; propensity

Quantum observations are inherently statistical. For example, the electrons in a low-intensity double slit experiment arrive at random times and seemingly random places and yet eventually show an interference pattern.

Matter wave double slit diffraction pattern building up electron by electron. Each white dot represents a single electron hitting a detector; with a statistically large number of electrons interference fringes appear.[17]

The theory of quantum mechanics offer only statistical results. Given that we have prepared a system in a state [math]\displaystyle{ \psi }[/math], the theory predicts a result [math]\displaystyle{ a_j }[/math] as a probability distribution:

[math]\displaystyle{ P(a_j|\psi)=|\lt a_j|\psi\gt |^2 }[/math].

Different approaches to probability can be applied to connect the probability distribution of theory to the observed randomness.

Popper,[18] Ballentine,[13] Paul Humphreys,[19] and others[20] point to propensity as the correct interpretation of probability in science. Propensity, a form of causality that is weaker than determinism, is the tendency of a physical system to produce a result.[21] Thus the mathematical statement

[math]\displaystyle{ Pr(e|G) = r }[/math]

means the propensity for event [math]\displaystyle{ e }[/math] to occur given the physical scenario [math]\displaystyle{ G }[/math] is [math]\displaystyle{ r }[/math]. The physical scenario is view as weakly causal condition.

The weak causation invalidates Bayes' theorem and correlation is no longer symmetric.[19] As noted by Paul Humphreys, many physical examples show the lack of reciprocal correlation, for example, the propensity for smokers to get lung cancer does not imply lung cancer has a propensity to cause smoking.

Propensity closely matches the application of quantum theory: single event probability can be predicted by theory but only verified by repeated samples in experiment. Popper explicitly developed propensity theory to eliminate subjectivity in quantum mechanics.[20]

Preparative and observing devices as origins of quantum randomness

An isolated quantum mechanical system, specified by a wave function, evolves in time in a deterministic way according to the Schrödinger equation that is characteristic of the system. Though the wave function can generate probabilities, no randomness or probability is involved in the temporal evolution of the wave function itself. This is agreed, for example, by Born,[22] Dirac,[23] von Neumann,[24] London & Bauer,[25] Messiah,[26] and Feynman & Hibbs.[27] An isolated system is not subject to observation; in quantum theory, this is because observation is an intervention that violates isolation.

The system's initial state is defined by the preparative procedure; this is recognized in the ensemble interpretation, as well as in the Copenhagen approach.[28][29]Cite error: Closing </ref> missing for <ref> tag[30] The decisive randomness comes from both preparation and observation, and may be summarized in a single randomness, that of the phase difference between preparative and observing devices. The distinction between these two devices is an important point of agreement between Copenhagen and ensemble interpretations. Though Ballentine claims that Einstein advocated "the ensemble approach", a detached scholar would not necessarily be convinced by that claim of Ballentine. There is room for confusion about how "the ensemble" might be defined.

"Each photon interferes only with itself"

Niels Bohr famously insisted that the wave function refers to a single individual quantum system. He was expressing the idea that Dirac expressed when he famously wrote: "Each photon then interferes only with itself. Interference between different photons never occurs.".[31] Dirac clarified this by writing: "This, of course, is true only provided the two states that are superposed refer to the same beam of light, i.e. all that is known about the position and momentum of a photon in either of these states must be the same for each."[32] Bohr wanted to emphasize that a superposition is different from a mixture. He seemed to think that those who spoke of a "statistical interpretation" were not taking that into account. To create, by a superposition experiment, a new and different pure state, from an original pure beam, one can put absorbers and phase-shifters into some of the sub-beams, so as to alter the composition of the re-constituted superposition. But one cannot do so by mixing a fragment of the original unsplit beam with component split sub-beams. That is because one photon cannot both go into the unsplit fragment and go into the split component sub-beams. Bohr felt that talk in statistical terms might hide this fact.

The physics here is that the effect of the randomness contributed by the observing apparatus depends on whether the detector is in the path of a component sub-beam, or in the path of the single superposed beam. This is not explained by the randomness contributed by the preparative device.

Measurement and collapse

Bras and kets

The ensemble interpretation is notable for its relative de-emphasis on the duality and theoretical symmetry between bras and kets. The approach emphasizes the ket as signifying a physical preparation procedure.[33] There is little or no expression of the dual role of the bra as signifying a physical observational procedure. The bra is mostly regarded as a mere mathematical object, without very much physical significance. It is the absence of the physical interpretation of the bra that allows the ensemble approach to by-pass the notion of "collapse". Instead, the density operator expresses the observational side of the ensemble interpretation. It hardly needs saying that this account could be expressed in a dual way, with bras and kets interchanged, mutatis mutandis. In the ensemble approach, the notion of the pure state is conceptually derived by analysis of the density operator, rather than the density operator being conceived as conceptually synthesized from the notion of the pure state.

An attraction of the ensemble interpretation is that it appears to dispense with the metaphysical issues associated with reduction of the state vector, Schrödinger cat states, and other issues related to the concepts of multiple simultaneous states. The ensemble interpretation postulates that the wave function only applies to an ensemble of systems as prepared, but not observed. There is no recognition of the notion that a single specimen system could manifest more than one state at a time, as assumed, for example, by Dirac.[34] Hence, the wave function is not envisaged as being physically required to be "reduced". This can be illustrated by an example:

Consider a quantum die. If this is expressed in Dirac notation, the "state" of the die can be represented by a "wave" function describing the probability of an outcome given by:

[math]\displaystyle{ | \psi \rangle = \frac {|1\rangle + |2\rangle + |3\rangle + |4\rangle + |5\rangle + |6\rangle} {\sqrt{6}} }[/math]

Where the "+" sign of a probabilistic equation is not an addition operator, it is the standard probabilistic Boolean operator OR. The state vector is inherently defined as a probabilistic mathematical object such that the result of a measurement is one outcome OR another outcome.

It is clear that on each throw, only one of the states will be observed, but this is not expressed by a bra. Consequently, there appears to be no requirement for a notion of collapse of the wave function/reduction of the state vector, or for the die to physically exist in the summed state. In the ensemble interpretation, wave function collapse would make as much sense as saying that the number of children a couple produced, collapsed to 3 from its average value of 2.4.

The state function is not taken to be physically real, or be a literal summation of states. The wave function, is taken to be an abstract statistical function, only applicable to the statistics of repeated preparation procedures. The ket does not directly apply to a single particle detection, but only the statistical results of many. This is why the account does not refer to bras, and mentions only kets.

Diffraction

The ensemble approach differs significantly from the Copenhagen approach in its view of diffraction. The Copenhagen interpretation of diffraction, especially in the viewpoint of Niels Bohr, puts weight on the doctrine of wave–particle duality. In this view, a particle that is diffracted by a diffractive object, such as for example a crystal, is regarded as really and physically behaving like a wave, split into components, more or less corresponding to the peaks of intensity in the diffraction pattern. Though Dirac does not speak of wave–particle duality, he does speak of "conflict" between wave and particle conceptions.[35] He indeed does describe a particle, before it is detected, as being somehow simultaneously and jointly or partly present in the several beams into which the original beam is diffracted. So does Feynman, who speaks of this as "mysterious".[36]

The ensemble approach points out that this seems perhaps reasonable for a wave function that describes a single particle, but hardly makes sense for a wave function that describes a system of several particles. The ensemble approach demystifies this situation along the lines advocated by Alfred Landé, accepting Duane's hypothesis. In this view, the particle really and definitely goes into one or other of the beams, according to a probability given by the wave function appropriately interpreted. There is definite quantal transfer of translative momentum between particle and diffractive object.[37] This is recognized also in Heisenberg's 1930 textbook,[38] though usually not recognized as part of the doctrine of the so-called "Copenhagen interpretation". This gives a clear and utterly non-mysterious physical or direct explanation instead of the debated concept of wave function "collapse". It is presented in terms of quantum mechanics by other present day writers also, for example, Van Vliet.[39][40] For those who prefer physical clarity rather than mysterianism, this is an advantage of the ensemble approach, though it is not the sole property of the ensemble approach. With a few exceptions,[38][41][42][43][44][45][46] this demystification is not recognized or emphasized in many textbooks and journal articles.

Criticism

David Mermin sees the ensemble interpretation as being motivated by an adherence ("not always acknowledged") to classical principles.

"[...] the notion that probabilistic theories must be about ensembles implicitly assumes that probability is about ignorance. (The 'hidden variables' are whatever it is that we are ignorant of.) But in a non-deterministic world probability has nothing to do with incomplete knowledge, and ought not to require an ensemble of systems for its interpretation".

However, according to Einstein and others, a key motivation for the ensemble interpretation is not about any alleged, implicitly assumed probabilistic ignorance, but the removal of "…unnatural theoretical interpretations…". A specific example being the Schrödinger cat problem stated above, but this concept applies to any system where there is an interpretation that postulates, for example, that an object might exist in two positions at once.

Mermin also emphasises the importance of describing single systems, rather than ensembles.

"The second motivation for an ensemble interpretation is the intuition that because quantum mechanics is inherently probabilistic, it only needs to make sense as a theory of ensembles. Whether or not probabilities can be given a sensible meaning for individual systems, this motivation is not compelling. For a theory ought to be able to describe as well as predict the behavior of the world. The fact that physics cannot make deterministic predictions about individual systems does not excuse us from pursuing the goal of being able to describe them as they currently are."[47]

Schrödinger's cat

The ensemble interpretation states that superpositions are nothing but subensembles of a larger statistical ensemble. That being the case, the state vector would not apply to individual cat experiments, but only to the statistics of many similar prepared cat experiments. Proponents of this interpretation state that this makes the Schrödinger's cat paradox a trivial non-issue. However, the application of state vectors to individual systems, rather than ensembles, has claimed explanatory benefits, in areas like single-particle twin-slit experiments and quantum computing (see Schrödinger's cat applications). As an avowedly minimalist approach, the ensemble interpretation does not offer any specific alternative explanation for these phenomena.

The frequentist probability variation

The claim that the wave functional approach fails to apply to single particle experiments cannot be taken as a claim that quantum mechanics fails in describing single-particle phenomena. In fact, it gives correct results within the limits of a probabilistic or stochastic theory.

Probability always requires a set of multiple data, and thus single-particle experiments are really part of an ensemble — an ensemble of individual experiments that are performed one after the other over time. In particular, the interference fringes seen in the double-slit experiment require repeated trials to be observed.

The quantum Zeno effect

Main page: Physics:Quantum Zeno effect

Leslie Ballentine promoted the ensemble interpretation in his book Quantum Mechanics, A Modern Development. In it,[48] he described what he called the "Watched Pot Experiment". His argument was that, under certain circumstances, a repeatedly measured system, such as an unstable nucleus, would be prevented from decaying by the act of measurement itself. He initially presented this as a kind of reductio ad absurdum of wave function collapse.[49]

The effect has been shown to be real. Ballentine later wrote papers claiming that it could be explained without wave function collapse.[50]

See also

References

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  2. "The statistical interpretation of quantum mechanics". Nobel Lecture. December 11, 1954. https://www.nobelprize.org/uploads/2018/06/born-lecture.pdf. 
  3. Leslie E. Ballentine (1998). Quantum Mechanics: A Modern Development. World Scientific. p. Chapter 9. ISBN 981-02-4105-4. https://books.google.com/books?id=sHJRFHz1rYsC&q=intitle:Quantum+intitle:Mechanics+intitle:A+intitle:Modern+intitle:Development. 
  4. Einstein: Philosopher-Scientist, edited by Paul Arthur Schilpp (Tudor Publishing Company, 1957), p. 672.
  5. 5.0 5.1 Born, Max (1926). "Zur Quantenmechanik der Stoßvorgänge" (in de). Zeitschrift für Physik (Springer Science and Business Media LLC) 37 (12): 863–867. doi:10.1007/bf01397477. ISSN 1434-6001. Bibcode1926ZPhy...37..863B. ; English translation by Gunter Ludwig, pp. 206–225, 'On the quantum mechanics of collisions', in Wave Mechanics (1968), Pergamon, Oxford UK.
  6. "The statistical interpretation of quantum mechanics". Nobel Lecture. December 11, 1954. https://www.nobelprize.org/uploads/2018/06/born-lecture.pdf. 
  7. Einstein, Albert (March 1936). "Physics and reality" (in en). Journal of the Franklin Institute 221 (3): 349–382. doi:10.1016/S0016-0032(36)91047-5. Bibcode1936FrInJ.221..349E. https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0016003236910475. 
  8. 8.0 8.1 Home, D; Whitaker, M.A.B (January 1992). "Ensemble interpretations of quantum mechanics. A modern perspective" (in en). Physics Reports 210 (4): 223–317. doi:10.1016/0370-1573(92)90088-H. Bibcode1992PhR...210..223H. https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/037015739290088H. 
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  10. 10.0 10.1 10.2 Lomonosov Moscow State University; Pechenkin, Alexander (2021-05-28). "The Ensemble Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics and Scientific Realism". Acta Baltica Historiae et Philosophiae Scientiarum 9 (1): 5–17. doi:10.11590/abhps.2021.1.01. https://www.ies.ee/bahps/acta-baltica/abhps-9-1/01_abhps-2021-1-01.pdf. 
  11. 11.0 11.1 Ballentine, L. E. (1970-10-01). "The Statistical Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics" (in en). Reviews of Modern Physics 42 (4): 358–381. doi:10.1103/RevModPhys.42.358. ISSN 0034-6861. Bibcode1970RvMP...42..358B. https://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/RevModPhys.42.358. 
  12. Ballentine, Leslie E (2014) (in en). Quantum Mechanics: A Modern Development (2 ed.). WORLD SCIENTIFIC. doi:10.1142/9038. ISBN 978-981-4578-57-8. https://www.worldscientific.com/worldscibooks/10.1142/9038. 
  13. 13.0 13.1 13.2 Ballentine, Leslie E. (August 2016). "Propensity, Probability, and Quantum Theory" (in en). Foundations of Physics 46 (8): 973–1005. doi:10.1007/s10701-016-9991-0. ISSN 0015-9018. Bibcode2016FoPh...46..973B. http://link.springer.com/10.1007/s10701-016-9991-0. 
  14. Ballentine, Leslie (October 2008). "Classicality without Decoherence: A Reply to Schlosshauer" (in en). Foundations of Physics 38 (10): 916–922. doi:10.1007/s10701-008-9242-0. ISSN 0015-9018. Bibcode2008FoPh...38..916B. 
  15. Home, D. (1997). Conceptual Foundations of Quantum Physics: An Overview from Modern Perspectives, Springer, New York, ISBN:978-1-4757-9810-4, p. 362: "Einstein's references to the ensemble interpretation remained in general rather sketchy."
  16. Quantum Mechanics, A Modern Development, p. 48.
  17. Bach, Roger; Pope, Damian; Liou, Sy-Hwang; Batelaan, Herman (2013-03-13). "Controlled double-slit electron diffraction". New Journal of Physics (IOP Publishing) 15 (3): 033018. doi:10.1088/1367-2630/15/3/033018. ISSN 1367-2630. Bibcode2013NJPh...15c3018B. https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1367-2630/15/3/033018. 
  18. Popper, Karl R. “The Propensity Interpretation of Probability.” The British Journal for the Philosophy of Science, vol. 10, no. 37, 1959, pp. 25–42. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/685773. Accessed 27 Aug. 2023.
  19. 19.0 19.1 Humphreys, Paul (October 1985). "Why Propensities Cannot be Probabilities". The Philosophical Review 94 (4): 557–570. doi:10.2307/2185246. https://www.jstor.org/stable/2185246. 
  20. 20.0 20.1 Berkovitz, Joseph. “The Propensity Interpretation of Probability: A Re-Evaluation.” Erkenntnis (1975-) 80 (2015): 629–711. http://www.jstor.org/stable/24735118.
  21. For inferential probability, the arguments may, in principle, be any propositions. But for ensemble probability, the first argument A must be an event, and the second argument C must describe a repeatable procedure that can generate an ensemble of outcome events.[13]
  22. Born, Max (1951). "Physics in the Last Fifty Years". Nature (Springer Science and Business Media LLC) 168 (4276): 625–630. doi:10.1038/168625a0. ISSN 0028-0836. Bibcode1951Natur.168..625B. : 630: "We have accustomed ourselves to abandon deterministic causality for atomic events; but we have still retained the belief that probability spreads in space (multi-dimensional) and time according to deterministic laws in the form of differential equations."
  23. Dirac, Paul Adrien Maurice (1927). "The physical interpretation of the quantum dynamics". Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series A, Containing Papers of a Mathematical and Physical Character (The Royal Society) 113 (765): 621–641. doi:10.1098/rspa.1927.0012. ISSN 0950-1207. Bibcode1927RSPSA.113..621D. : "One can suppose that the initial state of a system determines definitely the state of the system at any subsequent time. ... The notion of probabilities does not enter into the ultimate description of mechanical processes."
  24. J. von Neumann (1932) (in de). Mathematische Grundlagen der Quantenmechanik. Berlin: Springer.  Translated as J. von Neumann (1955). Mathematical Foundations of Quantum Mechanics. Princeton NJ: Princeton University Press. https://archive.org/details/mathematicalfoun0613vonn.  P. 349: "... the time dependent Schrödinger differential equation ... describes how the system changes continuously and causally."
  25. London, F., Bauer, E. (1939). La Théorie de l'Observation dans la Mécanique Quantique, issue 775 of Actualités Scientifiques et Industrielles, section Exposés de Physique Générale, directed by Paul Langevin, Hermann & Cie, Paris, translated by Shimony, A., Wheeler, J.A., Zurek, W.H., McGrath, J., McGrath, S.M. (1983), at pp. 217–259 in Wheeler, J.A., Zurek, W.H. editors (1983). Quantum Theory and Measurement, Princeton University Press, Princeton NJ; p. 232: "... the Schrödinger equation has all the features of a causal connection."
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  27. Feynman, R.P., Hibbs, A. (1965). Quantum Mechanics and Path Integrals, McGraw–Hill, New York, p. 22: "the amultitudes φ are solutions of a completely deterministic equation (the Schrödinger equation)."
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  29. Messiah, A. (1961). Quantum Mechanics, volume 1, translated by G.M. Temmer from the French Mécanique Quantique, North-Holland, Amsterdam, pp. 204–205: "When the preparation is complete, and consequently the dynamical state of the system is completely known, one says that one is dealing with a pure state, in contrast to the statistical mixtures which characterize incomplete preparations."
  30. Rosenfeld, L. (1967).'Niels Bohr in the thirties: Consolidation and extension of the conception of complementarity', pp. 114–136 in Niels Bohr: His life and work as seen by his friends and colleagues, edited by S. Rozental, North Holland, Amsterdam; p. 124: "As a direct consequence of this situation it is now highly necessary, in the definition of any phenomenon, to specify the conditions of its observation, the kind of apparatus determining the particular aspect of the phenomenon we wish to observe; and we have to face the fact that different conditions of observation may well be incompatible with each other to the extent indicated by indeterminacy relations of the Heisenberg type."
  31. Dirac, P.A.M., The Principles of Quantum Mechanics, (1930), 1st edition, p. 15; (1935), 2nd edition, p. 9; (1947), 3rd edition, p. 9; (1958), 4th edition, p. 9.
  32. Dirac, P.A.M., The Principles of Quantum Mechanics, (1930), 1st edition, p. 8.
  33. Ballentine, L.E. (1998). Quantum Mechanics: a Modern Development, World Scientific, Singapore, p. 47: "The quantum state description may be taken to refer to an ensemble of similarly prepared systems."
  34. Dirac, P.A.M. (1958). The Principles of Quantum Mechanics, 4th edition, Oxford University Press, Oxford UK, p. 12: "The general principle of superposition of quantum mechanics applies to the states, with either of the above meanings, of any one dynamical system. It requires us to assume that between these states there exist peculiar relationships such that whenever the system is definitely in one state we can consider it as being partly in each of two or more other states."
  35. Dirac, P.A.M. (1958). The Principles of Quantum Mechanics, 4th edition, Oxford University Press, Oxford UK, p. 8.
  36. Feynman, R.P., Leighton, R.B., Sands, M. (1965). The Feynman Lectures on Physics, volume 3, Addison-Wesley, Reading, MA, p. 1–1. Accessed 2020-04-29.
  37. Ballentine, L.E. (1998). Quantum Mechanics: a Modern Development, World Scientific, Singapore, ISBN:981-02-2707-8, p. 136.
  38. 38.0 38.1 Heisenberg, W. (1930). The Physical Principles of the Quantum Theory, translated by C. Eckart and F.C. Hoyt, University of Chicago Press, Chicago, pp. 77–78.
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  46. Wennerström, Håkan (2014). "Scattering and diffraction described using the momentum representation". Advances in Colloid and Interface Science (Elsevier BV) 205: 105–112. doi:10.1016/j.cis.2013.10.025. ISSN 0001-8686. PMID 24262675. 
  47. Mermin, N.D. The Ithaca interpretation
  48. Leslie E. Ballentine (1998). Quantum Mechanics: A Modern Development. World Scientific. p. 342. ISBN 981-02-4105-4. https://books.google.com/books?id=sHJRFHz1rYsC&q=intitle:Quantum+intitle:Mechanics+intitle:A+intitle:Modern+intitle:Development. 
  49. "Like the old saying "A watched pot never boils", we have been led to the conclusion that a continuously observed system never changes its state! This conclusion is, of course false. The fallacy clearly results from the assertion that if an observation indicates no decay, then the state vector must be |y_u>. Each successive observation in the sequence would then "reduce" the state back to its initial value |y_u>, and in the limit of continuous observation there could be no change at all. Here we see that it is disproven by the simple empirical fact that [..] continuous observation does not prevent motion. It is sometimes claimed that the rival interpretations of quantum mechanics differ only in philosophy, and can not be experimentally distinguished. That claim is not always true. as this example proves". Ballentine, L. Quantum Mechanics, A Modern Development(p 342)
  50. Ballentine, L. E. (1991-05-01). "Comment on Quantum Zeno effect". Physical Review A (American Physical Society (APS)) 43 (9): 5165–5167. doi:10.1103/physreva.43.5165. ISSN 1050-2947. PMID 9905643. Bibcode1991PhRvA..43.5165B. : "The quantum Zeno effect is not a general characteristic of continuous measurements. In a recently reported experiment [Itano et al., Phys. Rev. A 41, 2295 (1990)], the inhibition of atomic excitation and deexcitation is not due to any collapse of the wave function, but instead is caused by a very strong perturbation due to the optical pulses and the coupling to the radiation field. The experiment should not be cited as providing empirical evidence in favor of the notion of wave-function collapse."

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