Physical Society Colloquium
Quantum Measurement in the Real World
Department of Physics University of Toronto
While quantum measurement remains the central philosophical conundrum
of quantum mechanics, it has recently grown into a respectable (read:
experimental!) discipline as well. New perspectives on measurement have
grown out of new technological possibilities, but also out of attempts to
design systems for quantum information processing. I will present several
examples of how our current ideas on quantum measurement go far beyond the
usual textbook treatments, using examples from our entangled-photon and
ultracold-atoms laboratories in Toronto. Topics will be drawn from weak
measurement, “interaction-free” measurement, Hardy's
Paradox, measurement-induced quantum logic, and techniques for controlling
and characterizing the coherence of quantum systems. The moral of the story
will be that there are many different kinds of measurement strategies, with
their own advantages and disadvantages; and that some things we have been
taught not to even think about can actually be measured in a certain sense.
Friday, January 20th 2012, 15:30
Ernest Rutherford Physics Building, Keys Auditorium (room 112)
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