An Experiment to Illustrate Superpositions

An experiment such as that in Figure 2.6 represents a measurement out-

come: the average value of the z-component of spin of the input beam is

+1/2, obtained by the weighted probabilities of spin 1/2 at the up port and

spin −1/2 at the down port, which in quantum notation is:

hS

z

i

|ii

=

1

2

|h↑

z

|↑

z

i|

2

+ (−

1

2

)|h↓

z

|↑

z

i|

2

=

1

2

.

Similarly, the experiment in Figure 2.4 gives us the average value of the x-

component of spin the input beam |↑

z

i, which is zero:

hS

z

i

|ii

= +

1

2

|h↑

x

|↑

z

i|

2

+ (−

1

2

)|h↓

x

|↑

z

i|

2

= 0.

Consider a beam of spin-up electrons from the filter SG

z

↑. We now set up

a second Stern–Gerlach machine, but rotated by an angle θ to z. Let us label

this machine “SG

θ

”. Into this machine we pass the beam of |↑

z

i electrons.

What would be the measured output? The schematic setup is in Figure (2.7)

and the outputs are |↑

θ

i state at the up port and |↓

θ

i state at the down port.

We wish to predict the probabilities of each state.

FIGURE 2.7: An experiment with the SG along an arbitrary direction θ.

Now the “classical” projection cos θ×1/2 of the spin of the incoming beam

along the θ direction, gives us an average value for the measured spin, weighing

in both the output ports. The intensity of the up beam gives an average

spin of +1/2 with probability P(↑

θ

) = |h↑

θ

|↑

z

i|

2

and −1/2 with probability

P(↓

θ

) = |h↓

θ

|↑

z

i|

2

. The total probability of this happening is cos θ. So we have

1

2

cos θ =

1

2

P(↑

θ

) −

1

2

P(↓

θ

). (2.8)

24 Introduction to Quantum Physics and Information Processing

We also have an equation for conservation of probability:

1 = P(↑

θ

) + P(↓

θ

). (2.9)

From these two, we get the probabilities of the up and down spin states in the

output:

P(↑

θ

) = cos

2

θ

2

, P(↓

θ

) = sin

2

θ

2

. (2.10)

Let’s check this result by comparing with the special cases:

• θ = 0: SG

θ

= SG

z

,

P(↑) = 1, P(↓) = 0.

• θ = π: SG

θ

= SG

−z

or an SG

z

turned upside down,

P(↑) = 0, P(↓) = 1.

• θ = π/2: SG

x

(or SG

y

)

P(↑) =

1

2

= P(↓)

Mathematically we can write the state of the input electron as a superpo-

sition of the output states of SG

θ

:

|↑

z

i = α|↑

θ

i + β|↓

θ

i,

where

|α|

2

= P(↑

θ

) = cos

2

θ

2

, |β|

2

= P(↓

θ

) = sin

2

θ

2

.

The experiment only tells us the magnitudes of the complex amplitudes α and

β.


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