Abstract

Nearly a century has passed, since the birth of quantum mechanics, and yet the measurement problem has not been solved. We investigate the measurement problem from two aspects. First we scrutinize the basic postulates adopted by existing theories and identify the postulate of classicality of apparatus (PCA) to be the origin of the trouble. Second, we analyze the simplest possible experimental setup, a single photon particle as an observed system S and a detector as an apparatus A, and we find that a quantum jump occurs as a microscopic interaction between S and a single particle in A. We call this a microscopic quantum jump (MIJ). The MIJ selects system eigenvalues (SEVs) such as a two-dimensional position and arrival time for an incident photon. The MIJ outputs a microscopic particle (MIP), which carries the information of the SEVs potentially. In the apparatus A, the MIP triggers amplification cascade of secondary particles, which we call the intermediate particles (IMPs). The IMPs are initially a few, but become plenty after the amplification. The output of the amplification is a macroscopic observable (MAO) such as a current pulse, which carries the information of the SEVs in actuality. The measurement is complete when the MAO is obtained. By adopting the postulate of the MIJ and by discarding the PCA, we have constructed a measurement theory, which is consistent with standard quantum mechanics.

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