Quantum measurement is traditionally described through projection operators acting instantaneously on a quantum state. While this formalism is operationally successful, its underlying physical interpretation remains open to discussion. In this work, we explore a structural perspective in which projection operators are interpreted as effective constraint operators, and measurement processes are modeled as sequences of constraint operations forming a constraint cascade. Rather than viewing measurement as a single abrupt transformation, this framework interprets it as a structured multi-stage process involving interaction, amplification, detection, and environmental coupling. Within this viewpoint, projection-like behavior may emerge as an effective description of an underlying cascade of physical constraint processes, potentially accompanied by decoherence effects. The approach does not aim to replace standard quantum mechanics, but to provide a conceptual bridge between operator-based measurement formalisms and physically implemented measurement dynamics. This work represents an early step toward a broader structural interpretation of quantum measurement and continuous quantum–classical emergence.
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Thanh Minh Nguyen
Instituto de Neurociencias
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Thanh Minh Nguyen (Tue,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/6a03cbfc1c527af8f1ecfcd3 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20129347