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by codethief
1019 days ago
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> > Why would we expect superpositions of quantum states to be encoded as a vector sum of the individual state vectors? > Because that's what the word superposition means. No, that's not what superposition means a priori. I can think of many other ways to implement (mathematically) the idea of a system being in "two states at the same time", apart from vector addition. Yes, if you do Stern-Gerlach often enough, you might convince yourself that the vector space structure is a sensible choice but I take issue with OP's statement that > there are logically no other possibilities as if things had been obvious right from the get-go. |
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The word was originally used to describe the decomposition of waveforms into sums of sinusoids, which is as canonical an example of a linear system as you can get.
> the idea of a system being in "two states at the same time", apart from vector addition.
But that's not what's going on. A system is only ever in one state at a time: the ability to treat it as a sum (modulo the norm) of other states is linearity of all operators. This has immediate observable consequences: nonlinear operators can distinguish between different ensembles realizing the same mixed state.