There are many excellent review articles on weak values (see e.g.[4][5][6][7] ) here we briefly cover the basics.
Definition
We will denote the initial state of a system as , while the final state of the system is denoted as . We will refer to the initial and final states of the system as the pre- and post-selected quantum mechanical states. With respect to these states, the weak value of the observable is defined as:
Notice that if then the weak value is equal to the usual expected value in the initial state or the final state . In general the weak value quantity is a complex number. The weak value of the observable becomes large when the post-selected state, , approaches being orthogonal to the pre-selected state, , i.e. . If is larger than the largest eigenvalue of or smaller than the smallest eigenvalue of the weak value is said to be anomalous.
As an example consider a spin 1/2 particle.[8] Take to be the Pauli Z operator with eigenvalues . Using the initial state
and the final state
we can calculate the weak value to be
For the weak value is anomalous.
Derivation
Here we follow the presentation given by Duck, Stevenson, and Sudarshan,[8] (with some notational updates from Kofman et al.[4]) which makes explicit when the approximations used to derive the weak value are valid.
Consider a quantum system that you want to measure by coupling an ancillary (also quantum) measuring device. The observable to be measured on the system is . The system and ancilla are coupled via the Hamiltonian
where the coupling constant is integrated over an interaction time and is the canonical commutator. The Hamiltonian generates the unitary
Take the initial state of the ancilla to have a Gaussian distribution
the position wavefunction of this state is
The initial state of the system is given by above; the state , jointly describing the initial state of the system and ancilla, is given then by:
Next the system and ancilla interact via the unitary . After this one performs a projective measurement of the projectors on the system. If we postselect (or condition) on getting the outcome , then the (unnormalized) final state of the meter is
To arrive at this conclusion, we use the first order series expansion of on line (I), and we require that[4][8]
On line (II) we use the approximation that for small . This final approximation is only valid when[4][8]
As is the generator of translations, the ancilla's wavefunction is now given by
This is the original wavefunction, shifted by an amount . By Busch's theorem[9] the system and meter wavefunctions are necessarily disturbed by the measurement. There is a certain sense in which the protocol that allows one to measure the weak value is minimally disturbing,[10] but there is still disturbance.[10]
Applications
Quantum metrology and tomography
At the end of the original weak value paper[1] the authors suggested weak values could be used in quantum metrology:
Another striking aspect of this experiment becomes evident when we consider it as a device for measuring
a small gradient of the magnetic field ... yields a tremendous amplification.
This suggestion was followed by Hosten and Kwiat[11] and later by Dixon et al.[12] It appears to be an interesting line of research that could result in improved quantum sensing technology.
Additionally in 2011, weak measurements of many photons prepared in the same pure state, followed by strong measurements of a complementary variable, were used to perform quantum tomography (i.e. reconstruct the state in which the photons were prepared).[13]
Quantum foundations
Weak values have been used to examine some of the paradoxes in the foundations of quantum theory. This relies to a large extent on whether weak values are deemed to be relevant to describe properties of quantum systems,[14] a point which is not obvious since weak values are generally different from eigenvalues. For example, the research group of Aephraim M. Steinberg at the University of Toronto confirmed Hardy's paradox experimentally using joint weak measurement of the locations of entangled pairs of photons.[15][16] (also see[17])
Building on weak measurements, Howard M. Wiseman proposed a weak value measurement of the velocity of a quantum particle at a precise position, which he termed its "naïvely observable velocity". In 2010, a first experimental observation of trajectories of a photon in a double-slit interferometer was reported, which displayed the qualitative features predicted in 2001 by Partha Ghose[18] for photons in the de Broglie-Bohm interpretation.[19][20] Following up on Wiseman's weak velocity measurement, Johannes Fankhauser and Patrick Dürr suggest in a paper that weak velocity measurements constitute no new arguments, let alone empirical evidence, in favor of or against standard de Broglie-Bohm theory. According to the authors such measurements could not provide direct experimental evidence displaying the shape of particle trajectories, even if it is assumed that some deterministic particle trajectories exist.[21]
Quantum computation
Weak values have been implemented into quantum computing to get a giant speed up in time complexity. In a paper,[22]Arun Kumar Pati describes a new kind of quantum computer using weak value amplification and post-selection (WVAP), and implements search algorithm which (given a successful post selection) can find the target state in a single run with time complexity , beating out the well known Grover's algorithm.
Recently, it has been shown that the pre- and postselection of a quantum
system recovers a completely hidden interference phenomenon in the measurement
apparatus. Studying the interference pattern shows that what is interpreted
as an amplification using the weak value is a pure phase effect and
the weak value plays no role in its interpretation. This phase effect
increases the degree of the entanglement which lies behind the effectiveness
of the pre- and postselection in the parameter estimation.[23]
Further reading
Zeeya Merali (April 2010). "Back From the Future". Discover. A series of quantum experiments shows that measurements performed in the future can influence the present.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
^ abcYakir Aharonov; David Z. Albert; Lev Vaidman (1988). "How the result of a measurement of a component of the spin of a spin-1/2 particle can turn out to be 100". Physical Review Letters. 60 (14): 1351–1354. Bibcode:1988PhRvL..60.1351A. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.60.1351. PMID10038016.
^ abcdDuck, I. M.; Stevenson, P. M.; Sudarshan, E. C. G. (1989). "The sense in which a "weak measurement" of a spin- extonehalf{} particle's spin component yields a value 100". Physical Review D. 40 (6): 2112–2117. Bibcode:1989PhRvD..40.2112D. doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.40.2112. PMID10012041.
^Paul Busch (2009). J. Christian; W. Myrvold (eds.). "No Information Without Disturbance": Quantum Limitations of Measurement. Invited contribution, "Quantum Reality, Relativistic Causality, and Closing the Epistemic Circle: An International Conference in Honour of Abner Shimony", Perimeter Institute, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada, July 18–21, 2006. Vol. 73. Springer-Verlag. pp. 229–256. arXiv:0706.3526. doi:10.1007/978-1-4020-9107-0. ISBN978-1-4020-9106-3. ISSN1566-659X. {{cite book}}: |journal= ignored (help)
^Sacha Kocsis, Sylvain Ravets, Boris Braverman, Krister Shalm, Aephraim M. Steinberg: Observing the trajectories of a single photon using weak measurement, 19th Australian Institute of Physics (AIP) Congress, 2010 [1]
^Kocsis Sacha, Braverman Boris, Ravets Sylvain, Stevens Martin J., Mirin Richard P., Shalm L. Krister, Steinberg Aephraim M. (2011). "Observing the Average Trajectories of Single Photons in a Two-Slit Interferometer". Science. 332 (6034): 1170–1173. Bibcode:2011Sci...332.1170K. doi:10.1126/science.1202218. PMID21636767. S2CID27351467.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)