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Quantum process

In quantum mechanics, a quantum process is a somewhat ambiguous term which usually refers to the time evolution of an (open) quantum system. Under very general assumptions, a quantum process is described by the quantum operation formalism (also known as a quantum dynamical map), which is a linear, trace-preserving, and completely positive map from the set of density matrices to itself. In quantum mechanics, a quantum process is a somewhat ambiguous term which usually refers to the time evolution of an (open) quantum system. Under very general assumptions, a quantum process is described by the quantum operation formalism (also known as a quantum dynamical map), which is a linear, trace-preserving, and completely positive map from the set of density matrices to itself. For instance, in quantum process tomography, the unknown quantum process is assumed to be a quantum operation. However, not all quantum processes can be captured within the quantum operation formalism; in principle, the density matrix of a quantum system can undergo completely arbitrary time evolution.

[ "Quantum", "Quantization (physics)", "Open quantum system", "Quantum dynamics", "Quantum history", "Minority interpretations of quantum mechanics", "Constructor theory", "Measurement in quantum mechanics", "Quantum dynamical semigroup" ]
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