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Wigner–Araki–Yanase theorem
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The Wigner–Araki–Yanase theorem, also known as the WAY theorem, is a result in quantum physics establishing that the presence of a conservation law limits the accuracy with which observables that fail to commute with the conserved quantity can be measured.[1][2][3] It is named for the physicists Eugene Wigner,[4] Huzihiro Araki and Mutsuo Yanase.[5][6]
The theorem can be illustrated with a particle coupled to a measuring apparatus.[7]: 421 If the position operator of the particle is and its momentum operator is , and if the position and momentum of the apparatus are and respectively, assuming that the total momentum is conserved implies that, in a suitably quantified sense, the particle's position itself cannot be measured. The measurable quantity is its position relative to the measuring apparatus, represented by the operator . The Wigner–Araki–Yanase theorem generalizes this to the case of two arbitrary observables and for the system and an observable for the apparatus, satisfying the condition that is conserved.[8][9]
Mikko Tukiainen gave a generalized version of the WAY theorem, which makes no use of conservation laws, but uses quantum incompatibility instead.[10]
Yui Kuramochi and Hiroyasu Tajima proved a generalized form of the theorem for possibly unbounded and continuous conserved observables.[11]
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