Quantum smoothing for classical mixtures
Abstract
In quantum mechanics, wave functions and density matrices represent our knowledge about a quantum system and give probabilities for the outcomes of measurements. If the combined dynamics and measurements on a system lead to a density matrix (t) with only diagonal elements in a given basis \|n\, it may be treated as a classical mixture, i.e., a system which randomly occupies the basis states |n with probabilities nn(t). Fully equivalent to so-called smoothing in classical probability theory, subsequent probing of the occupation of the states |n improves our ability to retrodict what was the outcome of a projective state measurement at time t. Here, we show with experiments on a superconducting qubit that the smoothed probabilities do not, in the same way as the diagonal elements of , permit a classical mixture interpretation of the state of the system at the past time t.
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