8,760 research outputs found
Occam's Quantum Strop: Synchronizing and Compressing Classical Cryptic Processes via a Quantum Channel
A stochastic process's statistical complexity stands out as a fundamental
property: the minimum information required to synchronize one process generator
to another. How much information is required, though, when synchronizing over a
quantum channel? Recent work demonstrated that representing causal similarity
as quantum state-indistinguishability provides a quantum advantage. We
generalize this to synchronization and offer a sequence of constructions that
exploit extended causal structures, finding substantial increase of the quantum
advantage. We demonstrate that maximum compression is determined by the
process's cryptic order---a classical, topological property closely allied to
Markov order, itself a measure of historical dependence. We introduce an
efficient algorithm that computes the quantum advantage and close noting that
the advantage comes at a cost---one trades off prediction for generation
complexity.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures;
http://csc.ucdavis.edu/~cmg/compmech/pubs/oqs.ht
The Ambiguity of Simplicity
A system's apparent simplicity depends on whether it is represented
classically or quantally. This is not so surprising, as classical and quantum
physics are descriptive frameworks built on different assumptions that capture,
emphasize, and express different properties and mechanisms. What is surprising
is that, as we demonstrate, simplicity is ambiguous: the relative simplicity
between two systems can change sign when moving between classical and quantum
descriptions. Thus, notions of absolute physical simplicity---minimal structure
or memory---at best form a partial, not a total, order. This suggests that
appeals to principles of physical simplicity, via Ockham's Razor or to the
"elegance" of competing theories, may be fundamentally subjective, perhaps even
beyond the purview of physics itself. It also raises challenging questions in
model selection between classical and quantum descriptions. Fortunately,
experiments are now beginning to probe measures of simplicity, creating the
potential to directly test for ambiguity.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, http://csc.ucdavis.edu/~cmg/compmech/pubs/aos.ht
Mode-locking in advection-reaction-diffusion systems: an invariant manifold perspective
Fronts propagating in two-dimensional advection-reaction-diffusion (ARD)
systems exhibit rich topological structure. When the underlying fluid flow is
periodic in space and time, the reaction front can lock to the driving
frequency. We explain this mode-locking phenomenon using so-called burning
invariant manifolds (BIMs). In fact, the mode-locked profile is delineated by a
BIM attached to a relative periodic orbit (RPO) of the front element dynamics.
Changes in the type (and loss) of mode-locking can be understood in terms of
local and global bifurcations of the RPOs and their BIMs. We illustrate these
concepts numerically using a chain of alternating vortices in a channel
geometry.Comment: 9 pages, 13 figure
Prediction, Retrodiction, and The Amount of Information Stored in the Present
We introduce an ambidextrous view of stochastic dynamical systems, comparing
their forward-time and reverse-time representations and then integrating them
into a single time-symmetric representation. The perspective is useful
theoretically, computationally, and conceptually. Mathematically, we prove that
the excess entropy--a familiar measure of organization in complex systems--is
the mutual information not only between the past and future, but also between
the predictive and retrodictive causal states. Practically, we exploit the
connection between prediction and retrodiction to directly calculate the excess
entropy. Conceptually, these lead one to discover new system invariants for
stochastic dynamical systems: crypticity (information accessibility) and causal
irreversibility. Ultimately, we introduce a time-symmetric representation that
unifies all these quantities, compressing the two directional representations
into one. The resulting compression offers a new conception of the amount of
information stored in the present.Comment: 17 pages, 7 figures, 1 table;
http://users.cse.ucdavis.edu/~cmg/compmech/pubs/pratisp.ht
Information Accessibility and Cryptic Processes: Linear Combinations of Causal States
We show in detail how to determine the time-reversed representation of a
stationary hidden stochastic process from linear combinations of its
forward-time -machine causal states. This also gives a check for the
-cryptic expansion recently introduced to explore the temporal range over
which internal state information is spread.Comment: 6 pages, 9 figures, 2 tables;
http://users.cse.ucdavis.edu/~cmg/compmech/pubs/iacplcocs.ht
Optimizing Quantum Models of Classical Channels: The reverse Holevo problem
Given a classical channel---a stochastic map from inputs to outputs---the
input can often be transformed to an intermediate variable that is
informationally smaller than the input. The new channel accurately simulates
the original but at a smaller transmission rate. Here, we examine this
procedure when the intermediate variable is a quantum state. We determine when
and how well quantum simulations of classical channels may improve upon the
minimal rates of classical simulation. This inverts Holevo's original question
of quantifying the capacity of quantum channels with classical resources. We
also show that this problem is equivalent to another, involving the local
generation of a distribution from common entanglement.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures;
http://csc.ucdavis.edu/~cmg/compmech/pubs/qfact.htm; substantially updated
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