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  Distinguishing a system of particles in mixed states with a system of particles in a coherent superposition of the two states.

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Let us imagine two systems A and B . A has n particles which are in a superposition of equally probable two states; B has the same particles but in a mixed state in equal numbers. Experimentally, how can the two systems be distinguished?

asked Jun 22, 2014 in Experimental Physics by Curious Outsider [ no revision ]

The distinction comes when you measure in a rotated basis, or equivalently, apply a Hamiltonian which does a transition between the states and then measure. The distinction is well known, it is the difference between the interference in two-slit and the non-interfering classical particle two-slit. When you have transitions in a coherent quantum superpositions, they can destructively interfere, and the constructive interference is more than the classical sum of probabilities. This is well known at the undergraduate level, and I think this question is more appropriate to a low-level forum like stackexchange, apologies to a sincere user.

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For a 2-level system (or an N-level system for small N) the answer is easy. Observe enough independent instances of measurements of $N^2$ linearly independent observables $A_k$ (including a constant observable whose expectation one gets for free) to get reliable estimates of their expectations. Then one can reconstruct the coefficients of the density matrix $\rho$ by solving a linear system derived from $\langle A_k\rangle = trace(A \rho)$. This completely determines the state to an accuracy depending on the number of repetitions.

Then compute a singular value decomposition of $\rho$ and check whether all but one singular value are zero within the statistical uncertainty. If not, the system is in a mixed state. If there is only one significant eigenvalue, the  state can be approximated to the appropriate significance level by a pure state.

One cannot really decide whether the system is exactly in a pure state (except sometimes by looking at the generating equipment) , as this requires infinite accuracy - arbitrarily close to any pure state there are always mixed states. Indeed, unless the preparation of a physical state is specifically designed to produce exact pure states (which is the case, e.g., in a Stern-Gerlach experiment), a system is with probability one in a mixed state since the pure states have measure zero in the set of all mixed states. 

In practice, pure states are just a convenient idealization for mixed states in which a rank one contribution dominates the state.

answered Jun 25, 2014 by Arnold Neumaier (15,787 points) [ no revision ]

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