sol invictus
Philosopher
- Joined
- Oct 21, 2007
- Messages
- 8,613
To be honest, I wish I had the article (read it first in a magazine store). The idea is that they have shown how to measure the wavefunction of a photon, given certain conditions, in a direct way, so that if you want to know what the wavefunction value is (up to normalization) at say position x, then it can be done by simply reading values from various instruments (this shows my ignorance on how these measurements work, but from what I have read, one measurement for amplitude and one for phase).
The normal method of measuring the wavefunction is with quantum state tomography. With that method you have to sample over and over again.
Even so, this might just turn out to be another interesting "corner" case. Since Bohm, Quantum Mechanics keeps on giving out nice surprises.
There's nothing in there that's any different from what I said - you make many measurements on an ensemble of identically prepared particles, and use the results to reproduce the wavefunction. It's just that there are clever and efficient ways to do that, and not so efficient ways to do it - just as with any other type of measurement.