Recommended Advanced Undergrad QM Book for Density Matrices and POVM's

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The discussion centers on finding an advanced undergraduate quantum mechanics (QM) book that effectively covers the formulation of quantum mechanics using density matrices and positive operator-valued measures (POVMs). The original poster, an engineering student with limited math background, seeks a resource that explains both the QM concepts and the necessary mathematical foundations, similar to Shankar's work, but with a focus on POVMs and projection-valued measures (PVMs). They express difficulty in finding standard QM texts that address these topics comprehensively. A suggestion is made for a specific book from World Scientific, which includes relevant chapters on density matrices. The poster's interest in these concepts stems from their research in a quantum cryptography group, where understanding the theoretical framework is essential for their lab work.
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Does anyone have any good suggestions for a QM book at the advanced undergrad level? I am interested in particular about the QM formulation using density matrices as states and POVM's as measurements.

I am an engineering student, so my math background isn't too strong beyond the basic linear algebra/calculus 1-2-3 courses. No analysis or abstract algebra or anything like that, so I would actually like a QM book that can also explain the math, kind of like Shankar... except Shankar doesn't even cover PVM's as I recall (I might be wrong though).

Thanks in advance for any suggestions!
 
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I don't know of any standard quantum mechanics book that explains POVM's and PVM's. I do have a functional analysis book that treats projection-valued measures, but this book assumes prerequisites like real analysis, measure theory, Hilbert spaces, etc.

Where did you hear about them?

http://www.worldscibooks.com/physics/p001.html" is a nice little book that might interest you. Check out the links for the detailed table of contents and the scope of the book (Chapter 1.1). Density matrices are treated in 6.1 and 6.4.4.
 
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Thanks for the suggestion George, I will check that book out.

As for how did I hear about these things, PVM's were covered in my third year QM course. Now, I am doing research in a quantum cryptography group, and although I will mostly be working in the lab, I'd like to have a better understanding of the theory behind what I'm doing... and most of the papers I've seen use density matrices and POVM's.
 
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