# Projection of states after measurement

Continuing from the my previous 2-state system problem, I am told that the observable corresponding to the linear operator $\hat{L}$ is measured and we get the +1 state. Then it asks for the probability that +1 is measured again if the system is measured again at $t$. I would have thought that this probability is 1 since measurement projects the system into the first measured outcome such that successive measurements are consistent. But clearly I am mistaken, since it also asks to show that the probability = 0 for t = $\pi\hbar\over \Delta E$.

Could anyone please explain to me what is going on? Thanks.

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The measurement does project the state, but unless $[H,L]=0$ it doesn't have to stay that way. –  wsc Sep 2 '11 at 11:43
Thanks, wsc. Would you mind explaining that a little bit more? –  justcurious Sep 2 '11 at 11:48
@justcurious the time evolution of an observable is $\frac{d}{dt}O=\frac{i}{\hbar}\left[H,O\right]+\frac{\partial}{\partial t}O$ just as in analytical mechanics where instead of the commurator, you take the poisson bracket. –  luksen Sep 2 '11 at 14:11

...but that part isn't. Although a measurement of $\hat{L}$ does put the system into the eigenstate of $\hat{L}$ corresponding to the measured eigenvalue, it doesn't mean it's going to stay in that state - after all, the time evolution of the system (i.e. the Schroedinger equation, Heisenberg equation, evolution operator... however you want to describe it) doesn't stop just because you made a measurement.