Bloch sphere
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Bloch sphere
Quantum mechanics is mathematically formulated in Hilbert space, or more precisely, projective Hilbert space. The space of pure states of a quantum system is given by the rays in the Hilbert space (the "points" of projective Hilbert space). The space of rays in any vector space is a projective space, and in particular, the space of rays in a two dimensional Hilbert space is the complex projective line, which is isomorphic to a sphere.
The natural metric on the Bloch sphere is the Fubini-Study metric.
The qubit
To show this correspondence explicitly, consider the qubit description of the Bloch sphere; any state ψ can be written as a complex superposition of the ket vectors [ |0 \rangle] and [|1 \rangle ]; moreover since phase factors do not affect physical state, we can take the representation so that the coefficient of [ |0 \rangle] is real and non-negative. Thus ψ has a representation as- [ |\psi \rangle = \cos \theta \, |0 \rangle + e^ \sin \theta \,|1 \rangle ]
- [ 0 \leq \theta < \frac, \quad 0 \leq \phi < 2 \pi.]
- [ \begin x & = & \sin 2 \theta \times \cos \phi \\ y & = & \sin 2 \theta \times \sin \phi \\ z & = & \cos 2 \theta \end]
Generalization
Consider an n-level quantum mechanical system. This system is described by an n-dimensional Hilbert space Hn. The pure state space is by definition the set of 1-dimensional rays of Hn.
Theorem. Let U(n) be the Lie group of unitary matrices of size n. Then the pure state space of Hn can be identified with the compact coset space
- [ \operatorname(n) /(\operatorname(n-1) \times \operatorname(1)). ]
- [ \operatorname(n-1) \times \operatorname(1). ]
The important fact to note above is that the unitary group acts transitively on pure states.
Now the (real) dimension of U(n) is n2. This is easy to see since the exponential map
- [ A \mapsto e^ ]
Corollary. The real dimension of the pure state space of Hn is 2n − 2.
In fact,
- [ n^2 - ((n-1)^2 +1) = 2 n - 2. \quad ]
Corollary. The real dimension of the pure state space of an m qubit quantum register is 2m+1 − 2.
The geometry of density operators
Formulations of quantum mechanics in terms of pure states are adequate for isolated systems; in general quantum mechanical systems need to be described in terms of density operators. The topological description is complicated by the fact that the unitary group does not act transitively on density operators. The orbits moreover are extremely diverse as follows from the following observation:
Theorem. Suppose A is a density operator on an n level quantum mechanical system whose distinct eigenvalues are μ1, ..., μk with multiplicities n1, ...,nk. Then the group of unitary operators V such that V A V* = A is isomorphic (as a Lie group) to
- [\operatorname(n_1) \times \cdots \times \operatorname(n_k).]
- [\operatorname(n)/(\operatorname(n_1) \times \cdots \times \operatorname(n_k)).]
References
- Darius Chrusinski, "[Geometric Aspect of Quantum Mechanics and Quantum Entanglement]", Journal of Physics Conference Series, 39 (2006) pp.9-16.
External link
- [Rabi Flopping Oscillations] A small animation of the bloch vector submitted to a resonant excitation.
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