50 research outputs found
Condition for macroscopic realism beyond the Leggett-Garg inequalities
In 1985, Leggett and Garg put forward the concept of macroscopic realism
(macrorealism) and, in analogy to Bell's theorem, derived a necessary condition
in terms of inequalities, which are now known as the Leggett-Garg inequalities.
In this paper, we discuss another necessary condition called no-signaling in
time. It solely bases on comparing the probability distribution for a
macrovariable at some time for the cases where previously a measurement has or
has not been performed. Although the concept is analogous to the no-signaling
condition in the case of Bell tests, it can be violated according to quantum
mechanical predictions even in situations where no violation of Leggett-Garg
inequalities is possible.Comment: 6 pages, 1 table, 1 figure, published versio
A no-go theorem for observer-independent facts
In his famous thought experiment, Wigner assigns an entangled state to the
composite quantum system made up of Wigner's friend and her observed system.
While the two of them have different accounts of the process, each Wigner and
his friend can in principle verify his/her respective state assignments by
performing an appropriate measurement. As manifested through a click in a
detector or a specific position of the pointer, the outcomes of these
measurements can be regarded as reflecting directly observable "facts".
Reviewing arXiv:1507.05255, I will derive a no-go theorem for
observer-independent facts, which would be common both for Wigner and the
friend. I will then analyze this result in the context of a newly derived
theorem in arXiv:1604.07422, where Frauchiger and Renner prove that
"single-world interpretations of quantum theory cannot be self-consistent". It
is argued that "self-consistency" has the same implications as the assumption
that observational statements of different observers can be compared in a
single (and hence an observer-independent) theoretical framework. The latter,
however, may not be possible, if the statements are to be understood as
relational in the sense that their determinacy is relative to an observer.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figure