52 research outputs found
Symmetry and Self-Duality in Categories of Probabilistic Models
This note adds to the recent spate of derivations of the probabilistic
apparatus of finite-dimensional quantum theory from various axiomatic packages.
We offer two different axiomatic packages that lead easily to the Jordan
algebraic structure of finite-dimensional quantum theory. The derivation relies
on the Koecher-Vinberg Theorem, which sets up an equivalence between order-unit
spaces having homogeneous, self-dual cones, and formally real Jordan algebras.Comment: In Proceedings QPL 2011, arXiv:1210.029
Conjugates, Filters and Quantum Mechanics
The Jordan structure of finite-dimensional quantum theory is derived, in a
conspicuously easy way, from a few simple postulates concerning abstract
probabilistic models (each defined by a set of basic measurements and a convex
set of states). The key assumption is that each system A can be paired with an
isomorphic system, , by means of a
non-signaling bipartite state perfectly and uniformly correlating each
basic measurement on A with its counterpart on . In the case of a
quantum-mechanical system associated with a complex Hilbert space ,
the conjugate system is that associated with the conjugate Hilbert space
, and corresponds to the standard maximally
entangled EPR state on . A second
ingredient is the notion of a , that is, a
probabilistically reversible process that independently attenuates the
sensitivity of detectors associated with a measurement. In addition to offering
more flexibility than most existing reconstructions of finite-dimensional
quantum theory, the approach taken here has the advantage of not relying on any
form of the "no restriction" hypothesis. That is, it is not assumed that
arbitrary effects are physically measurable, nor that arbitrary families of
physically measurable effects summing to the unit effect, represent physically
accessible observables. An appendix shows how a version of Hardy's "subspace
axiom" can replace several assumptions native to this paper, although at the
cost of disallowing superselection rules.Comment: 33 pp. Minor corrections throughout; some revision of Appendix
A Royal Road to Quantum Theory (or Thereabouts)
This paper fails to derive quantum mechanics from a few simple postulates.
But it gets very close --- and it does so without much exertion. More exactly,
I obtain a representation of finite-dimensional probabilistic systems in terms
of euclidean Jordan algebras, in a strikingly easy way, from simple
assumptions. This provides a framework within which real, complex and
quaternionic QM can play happily together, and allows some --- but not too much
--- room for more exotic alternatives. (This is a leisurely summary, based on
recent lectures, of material from the papers arXiv:1206:2897 and
arXiv:1507.06278, the latter joint work with Howard Barnum and Matthew Graydon.
Some further ideas are also explored.)Comment: 33 pages, 3 figures. An expanded and somewhat informal account of
material from arXiv:1206:2897, plus some new results. A number of typos and
other minor errors are corrected in version
Local tomography and the Jordan structure of quantum theory
Using a result of H. Hanche-Olsen, we show that (subject to fairly natural
constraints on what constitutes a system, and on what constitutes a composite
system), orthodox finite-dimensional complex quantum mechanics with
superselection rules is the only non-signaling probabilistic theory in which
(i) individual systems are Jordan algebras (equivalently, their cones of
unnormalized states are homogeneous and self-dual), (ii) composites are locally
tomographic (meaning that states are determined by the joint probabilities they
assign to measurement outcomes on the component systems) and (iii) at least one
system has the structure of a qubit. Using this result, we also characterize
finite dimensional quantum theory among probabilistic theories having the
structure of a dagger-monoidal category
- …