Lectures on quantum theory, by Chris Isham

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"Lectures on Quantum Theory: Mathematical and Structural Foundations" by Chris Isham is highly recommended for those looking to deepen their understanding of quantum mechanics, especially after completing a QM class. The book is accessible, omitting complex mathematics while clearly indicating what is excluded for further study. It provides valuable insights into state preparation, measurements, and the realism versus anti-realism debate in quantum interpretations. Although it includes some exercises with solutions, it primarily focuses on foundational concepts rather than detailed interpretations of state vectors. Overall, it serves as a useful resource for both undergraduates and graduate students interested in the foundational aspects of quantum theory.
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This is an excellent book, so I'm surprised it's only been mentioned once before in the science book forum. It deserves a lot more attention than that, so I thought I'd at least post a recommendation. The full title is "Lectures on quantum theory: mathematical and structural foundations". If you have already taken a QM class and want to understand the foundations better, this is a very good place to start.

This is supposed to be a fairly easy book, so he has chosen not to include the difficult mathematics (advanced functional analysis, how to find irreducible representations of symmetry groups, etc.). But he always let's you know what he's leaving out, so that you know what to look for if you want to know more. It's written for undergraduates, but I'm sure a lot of graduate students would find it useful too.

It contains a very good discussion about state preparation and measurements, and about some of the interpretational issues. He doesn't go into detail about the various attempts to interpret state vectors as representing objective properties of physical systems, but he talks a lot about "realism" vs "anti-realism". The book also contains an introduction to quantum logic at the end.

It contains a small number of exercises, with complete solutions.
 
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I love this book.

In my head, I referred to this book in quite a few responses to posts in this forum, but, unfortunately, only one response made it from my head to the keyboard.
 
With reference to fourth anti-realist interpo in section 5.1.1:
... a quantum state should not be associated with an individual system; rather, it
refers only to a collection, or ‘ensemble’ copies of the system...
How to represent this ensemble of system matematically?
Doesn't |psi> represent an individual system?
 
That's also possible. (It's option #1 on the list). We don't know what the state vector actually represents, since experiments can only tell us how accurate the theory's predictions are. The predictions are the same regardless of which option on the list is correct.

If we choose option 1, the many-worlds interpretation or something very much like it appears inevitable, because the formalism doesn't contain any indication that one of the possibilities is more real than the others. If we choose option 4, we're essentially saying that even though QM makes excellent predictions about probabilities of results of experiments, it isn't telling us anything about what actually happens to physical systems. It's just a set of rules that tells us how to calculate probabilities of possibilities.
 
The book is fascinating. If your education includes a typical math degree curriculum, with Lebesgue integration, functional analysis, etc, it teaches QFT with only a passing acquaintance of ordinary QM you would get at HS. However, I would read Lenny Susskind's book on QM first. Purchased a copy straight away, but it will not arrive until the end of December; however, Scribd has a PDF I am now studying. The first part introduces distribution theory (and other related concepts), which...
I've gone through the Standard turbulence textbooks such as Pope's Turbulent Flows and Wilcox' Turbulent modelling for CFD which mostly Covers RANS and the closure models. I want to jump more into DNS but most of the work i've been able to come across is too "practical" and not much explanation of the theory behind it. I wonder if there is a book that takes a theoretical approach to Turbulence starting from the full Navier Stokes Equations and developing from there, instead of jumping from...

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