Inner product of vectors gives the component of one vector in the direction

of the other. Similarly for quantum states, the inner product hψ|φi is the

probability amplitude that one state is along the other. For example,

|ψi =

1

3

|0i +

r

2

3

|1i.

Then the inner product

h0|ψi =

1

3

is the probability amplitude that the state |ψi has spin up.

As another example, the Hilbert space of position states of a particle along

the x-axis would have an infinite set of basis states |xi. A general state |ψi

has a probability amplitude hx|ψi = ψ(x) of being found at the location x.

This probability amplitude as a function of position is better known as the

wave function of the particle.

The inner product also comes in when describing the outcome of a process

that transforms a system from initial state |ψ

i

i to final state |ψ

f

i. The mod-

square of the probability amplitude for this process is then the probability

that such an event can occur:

P(|ψ

i

i → |ψ

f

i) = |hψ

f

i

i|

2

. (3.3)

This statement, one of the underpinnings of quantum mechanics, is known as

the Born rule after Max Born,

3

who first postulated it.

3.1.3 Phases

The coefficients in the expansion of a state in terms of the basis states are

complex numbers in general. We saw one reason for this in the last chapter:

3

In a 1926 paper in a German journal, Born mentioned the probability interpretation in

a footnote.

40 Introduction to Quantum Physics and Information Processing

we need to account for interference when probability amplitudes are added.

Now a complex number has a modulus and a phase: z = x + iy has magnitude

r =

p

x

2

+ y

2

and a phase φ = tan

−1

y/x. r and φ are real numbers and we

express the same complex number in modular form as z = re

. Suppose we

write

|ψi = r

1

e

1

|0i + r

2

e

2

|1i. (3.4)

Different values of r

1

θ

1

and r

2

θ

2

give different vectors. For a given vector |ψi,

we can factor out one of the phases to write

|ψi = e

1

r

1

|0i + r

2

e

i(θ

2

−θ

1

)

|1i

(3.5)

The factored phase θ

1

is called a global phase. This cannot be measured by

any experiment since experiments only measure probabilities. In other words

the above state is experimentally indistinguishable from the state

0

i = r

1

|0i + r

2

e

i(θ

2

−θ

1

)

|1i,

since |hψ|ψ

0

i|

2

= 1. What is measurable, however, is the relative phase

2

− θ

1

), which will show up in an interference experiment. The set of all

states differing by a global phase is called a ray in Hilbert space.

Thus the space of quantum states of a system is the space of rays in Hilbert

space, also called the projective Hilbert space. We will not emphasize this

difference in what follows, but it is a point to be kept in mind.

The fact that relative phases between components in a superposition state

are very important will become more relevant when we consider operations

on quantum systems that impart selective phases to one basis state, say |1i.

For instance, consider an operation

|0i → |0i; |1i → e

|1i.

Though such an operation produces indistinguishable states out of basis states,

the effect will be non-trivial on superposition states, since it would introduce

a relative phase between the |0i and |1i components:

|ψi = c

1

|0i + c

2

|1i → c

1

|0i + e

c

2

|1i


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