I was reading Feynman lectures III's Spin One; there at the machinery of quantum mechanics he discusses a situation in which he needs to find the amplitude of finding the particle at ${\chi}$ state after it travels through an apparatus $A$ before being at state $\phi$. So, the amplitude can be written as $\langle \chi|A|\phi\rangle$.
But, there it was not done so; Feynman reasoned that:
[...]we would want to know the amplitude $$\langle \chi|A|\phi\rangle$$ A complete analysis of the apparatus $A$ would have to give the amplitude $\langle \chi|A|\phi\rangle$ for every possible pair of states $\phi$ and $\chi$— an infinite number of combinations!
Now, $\phi$ only contains three base states $+S$,$0$,$-S$; $\chi$ contains three base states $+R$,$0$,$-R$; in the middle exits the apparatus $A$ - how can the three states on the left & three states on the right along with $A$ make "infinite number of combinations!"?
How then can we give a concise description of the behavior of the apparatus A? We can do it in the following way. Imagine that the apparatus of (5.28) is modified to be
This is really no modification at all since the wide-open T apparatuses don’t do anything. But they do suggest how we can analyze the problem. There is a certain set of amplitudes $\langle i|+S\rangle$ that the atoms from $S$ will get into the $i$ state of $T$. Then there is another set of amplitudes that an $i$ state (with respect to $T$) entering $A$ will come out as a $j$ state (with respect to $T$). And finally there is an amplitude that each $j$ state will get through the last filter as a ($0R$) state. For each possible alternative path, there is an amplitude of the form $$\langle 0R|j\rangle\langle j|A| i\rangle\langle i| +S\rangle$$and the total amplitude is the sum of the terms we can get with all possible combinations of $i$ and $j$. The amplitude we want is $$\sum_{ij} \langle 0R|j\rangle\langle j|A| i\rangle\langle i| +S\rangle$$.
If ($0R$) and ($+S$) are replaced by general states $χ$ and $ϕ$, we would have the same kind of expression; so we have the general result $$\langle \chi|A|\phi\rangle = \sum_{ij} \langle \chi|j\rangle\langle j|A| i\rangle\langle i| \phi\rangle$$
Now notice that the right-hand side of Eq. (5.32) is really “simpler” than the left-hand side. The apparatus A is completely described by the nine numbers $\langle j|A|i\rangle$ which tell the response of $A$ with respect to the three base states of the apparatus $T$. Once we know these nine numbers, we can handle any two incoming and outgoing states $ϕ$ and $χ$ if we define each in terms of the three amplitudes for going into, or from, each of the three base states.
This then is the machinery of quantum mechanics for a spin-one particle. Every state is described by three numbers which are the amplitudes to be in each of some selected set of base states. Every apparatus is described by nine numbers which are the amplitudes to go from one base state to another in the apparatus. From these numbers anything can be calculated.
Why is $\langle \chi|j\rangle\langle j|A| i\rangle\langle i| \phi\rangle$ "simpler" than $\langle \chi|A|\phi\rangle$ ? How did by introduction of $T$, it became "simpler"?
I am not getting what problem there would if we simply measure $\langle \chi|A|\phi\rangle$; how does it arise infinite number of combinations, after all the sets of $\phi$ & $\chi$ contain only three states each? Can anyone please help me explain how three base states give rise to infinite number of combinations? And also, what advantage do we get if we introduce the open-channel apparatus $T$??
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