$\newcommand{\ket}[1]{\left|#1\right>}$ Note: I considered posting this as an update to a prior question, but it seemed like it should be it's own post.
So this is a very basic question, but one I've had a lot of confusion about. Here is my attempt at a solution:
Let's consider the example:
Bob has a single qubit in a normalized state state $\ket{\psi}$ = $\frac{1}{2}[\ket{0}-\ket{1}]$. He wants to measure an observable $\sigma_x$, which is the x-Pauli matrix, $\sigma_x= \begin{pmatrix} 0 & 1 \\ 1 & 0 \end{pmatrix}$. He wants to measure the result along the x-basis.
First, to determine the (theoretical) possible measurement values and the states they correspond to, he finds the eigenstates and eigenvalues of $\sigma_x$. They are:
- $\lambda_1=-1$; $\vec{v_1}=\frac{1}{\sqrt(2)}[\ket{0}-\ket{1}]=\ket{-}$
- $\lambda_1=1$; $\vec{v_1}=\frac{1}{\sqrt(2)}[\ket{0}+\ket{1}]=\ket{+}$
where the eigenvectors could be defined slightly differently, but we're using this as convention.
To find the probabilities of each possible outcome, he then applies the $\sigma_x$ operator to the state %\ket{\psi}} and writes the result in the x basis. Doing so, he gets:
$\sigma_x\frac{1}{\sqrt(2)}[\ket{0}-\ket{1}]$
$=\frac{1}{\sqrt(2)}$$[\ket{1}-\ket{0}]$
$=0\ket{+}-(1)\ket{-}$
indicating that the $\ket{+}$ result (measurement value +1) occurs with probability 0 and the $\ket{-}$ result occurs with probability $|(-1)|^2$ = 1.
Now, let's instead consider the probability if he wanted to measure the operator along the z-basis. In this case, he would considers the eigenvectors of the $\sigma_x$ operator in terms of the z-basis. As before,:
- $\lambda_1=-1$; $\vec{v_1}=\frac{1}{\sqrt(2)}[\ket{0}-\ket{1}]$
- $\lambda_1=1$; $\vec{v_1}=\frac{1}{\sqrt(2)}[\ket{0}+\ket{1}]$
In the z-basis, he had:
$=\frac{1}{\sqrt(2)}$$[\ket{1}-\ket{0}]$. This indicates that the $\vec{v_1}=\frac{1}{\sqrt(2)}[\ket{0}+\ket{1}]=$ state above occurs with probability 0 and the $\vec{v_1}=\frac{1}{\sqrt(2)}[\ket{0}-\ket{1}]=$ occurs with probability . . .
and this is where I start to get lost; the probabilities aren't adding to 1; so something's wrong.
Attempt at understanding where I went wrong: I know that the the possible measurement values of an observable are the eigenvalues of the corresponding Hermitian matrix, and that the state of the system corresponding to that eigenvalue is its eigenvector. I'm not sure I should have included the factor of $\frac{1}{\sqrt(2)}$ in front of the eigenvector; it's just that in class we always use $\ket{\pm}$ as the eigenvectors of $\sigma_x$.