Today's post, Decoherence as Projection was originally published on 02 May 2008. A summary (taken from the LW wiki):
Since quantum evolution is linear and unitary, decoherence can be seen as projecting a wavefunction onto orthogonal subspaces. This can be neatly illustrated using polarized photons and the angle of the polarized sheet that will absorb or transmit them.
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Yes, that's the one, and yes, it's different from the previous posts, but not in the way you think. In the previous posts there was a single complex number for every point in space, and its square modulus is probability density. In this case the infinitely dimensional space is replaced with a two-dimensional space (an analogy would be to replace the whole continuous space with just two points, "here" and "there"). Correspondingly, the probability density is replaced with probability at each point.
So, the photon polarization description is actually mathematically much simpler than the wave function in continuous space.
I think that I may not have made my point clear.
I understand that the configuration space in this post isn't "a photon here, a photon there", but rather "a photon with this polarization here, a photon with that polarization there".
In this post, we can think of space as discretized to consist of, say, three positions: (1) in between the first filter and the second filter, (2) at the second filter, and (3) beyond the second filter. (For simplicity, I'm just considering the case where we have only two filters: the 0° one followed by anoth... (read more)