39 research outputs found
Pauli problem in thermodynamics
A thermodynamic analogue of the Pauli problem (reconstruction of a
wavefunction from the position and momentum distributions) is formulated. The
coordinates of a quantum system are replaced by the inverse absolute
temperature and other intensive quantities, and the Planck constant is replaced
by the Boltzmann constant multiplied by two. A new natural mathematical
generalization of the quasithermodynamic fluctuation theory is suggested and
sufficient conditions for the existence of asymptotic solutions of the
thermodynamic Pauli problem are obtained.Comment: 35 pages; this is an extended version of my work on the Pauli problem
published as two separate papers in Doklady Mathematics ((vol. 87 issue 3)
and (vol. 88 issue 1)
Fluctuations of intensive quantities in statistical thermodynamics
In phenomenological thermodynamics, the canonical coordinates of a physical
system split in pairs with each pair consisting of an extensive quantity and an
intensive one. In the present paper, the quasi-thermodynamic fluctuation theory
of a model system of a large number of oscillators is extended to statistical
thermodynamics based on the idea to perceive the fluctuations of intensive
variables as the fluctuations of specific extensive ones in a
"thermodynamically dual" system. The extension is motivated by the symmetry of
the problem in the context of an analogy with quantum mechanics which is stated
in terms of a generalized Pauli problem for the thermodynamic fluctuations. The
doubled Boltzmann constant divided by the number of particles plays a similar
role to the Planck constant.Comment: 24 pages; download the journal version (open access) from
http://www.mdpi.com/1099-4300/15/11/488
Distortion of the Poisson Bracket by the Noncommutative Planck Constants
In this paper we introduce a kind of "noncommutative neighbourhood" of a
semiclassical parameter corresponding to the Planck constant. This construction
is defined as a certain filtered and graded algebra with an infinite number of
generators indexed by planar binary leaf-labelled trees. The associated graded
algebra (the classical shadow) is interpreted as a "distortion" of the algebra
of classical observables of a physical system. It is proven that there exists a
q-analogue of the Weyl quantization, where q is a matrix of formal variables,
which induces a nontrivial noncommutative analogue of a Poisson bracket on the
classical shadow
New Examples of Kochen-Specker Type Configurations on Three Qubits
A new example of a saturated Kochen-Specker (KS) type configuration of 64
rays in 8-dimensional space (the Hilbert space of a triple of qubits) is
constructed. It is proven that this configuration has a tropical dimension 6
and that it contains a critical subconfiguration of 36 rays. A natural
multicolored generalisation of the Kochen-Specker theory is given based on a
concept of an entropy of a saturated configuration of rays.Comment: 24 page
q-Legendre Transformation: Partition Functions and Quantization of the Boltzmann Constant
In this paper we construct a q-analogue of the Legendre transformation, where
q is a matrix of formal variables defining the phase space braidings between
the coordinates and momenta (the extensive and intensive thermodynamic
observables). Our approach is based on an analogy between the semiclassical
wave functions in quantum mechanics and the quasithermodynamic partition
functions in statistical physics. The basic idea is to go from the
q-Hamilton-Jacobi equation in mechanics to the q-Legendre transformation in
thermodynamics. It is shown, that this requires a non-commutative analogue of
the Planck-Boltzmann constants (hbar and k_B) to be introduced back into the
classical formulae. Being applied to statistical physics, this naturally leads
to an idea to go further and to replace the Boltzmann constant with an infinite
collection of generators of the so-called epoch\'e (bracketing) algebra. The
latter is an infinite dimensional noncommutative algebra recently introduced in
our previous work, which can be perceived as an infinite sequence of
"deformations of deformations" of the Weyl algebra. The generators mentioned
are naturally indexed by planar binary leaf-labelled trees in such a way, that
the trees with a single leaf correspond to the observables of the limiting
thermodynamic system
Exceptional and Non-crystallographic Root Systems and the Kochen-Specker Theorem
The Kochen-Specker theorem states that a 3-dimensional complex Euclidean
space admits a finite configuration of projective lines such that the
corresponding quantum observables (the orthogonal projectors) cannot be
assigned with 0 and 1 values in a classically consistent way. This paper shows
that the irreducible root systems of exceptional and of non-crystallographic
types are useful in constructing such configurations in other dimensions. The
cases and lead to new examples, while , , and ,
yield a new interpretation of the known ones. The described configurations have
an additional property: they are saturated, i.e. the tuples of mutually
orthogonal lines, being partially ordered by inclusion, yield a poset with all
maximal elements having the same cardinality (the dimension of space)
Parity proofs of the Bell-Kochen-Specker theorem based on the 600-cell
The set of 60 real rays in four dimensions derived from the vertices of a
600-cell is shown to possess numerous subsets of rays and bases that provide
basis-critical parity proofs of the Bell-Kochen-Specker (BKS) theorem (a
basis-critical proof is one that fails if even a single basis is deleted from
it). The proofs vary considerably in size, with the smallest having 26 rays and
13 bases and the largest 60 rays and 41 bases. There are at least 90 basic
types of proofs, with each coming in a number of geometrically distinct
varieties. The replicas of all the proofs under the symmetries of the 600-cell
yield a total of almost a hundred million parity proofs of the BKS theorem. The
proofs are all very transparent and take no more than simple counting to
verify. A few of the proofs are exhibited, both in tabular form as well as in
the form of MMP hypergraphs that assist in their visualization. A survey of the
proofs is given, simple procedures for generating some of them are described
and their applications are discussed. It is shown that all four-dimensional
parity proofs of the BKS theorem can be turned into experimental disproofs of
noncontextuality.Comment: 19 pages, 11 tables, 3 figures. Email address of first author has
been corrected. Ref.[5] has been corrected, as has an error in Fig.3.
Formatting error in Sec.4 has been corrected and the placement of tables and
figures has been improved. A new paragraph has been added to Sec.4 and
another new paragraph to the end of the Appendi
Critical noncolorings of the 600-cell proving the Bell-Kochen-Specker theorem
Aravind and Lee-Elkin (1997) gave a proof of the Bell-Kochen-Specker theorem
by showing that it is impossible to color the 60 directions from the center of
a 600-cell to its vertices in a certain way. This paper refines that result by
showing that the 60 directions contain many subsets of 36 and 30 directions
that cannot be similarly colored, and so provide more economical demonstrations
of the theorem. Further, these subsets are shown to be critical in the sense
that deleting even a single direction from any of them causes the proof to
fail. The critical sets of size 36 and 30 are shown to belong to orbits of 200
and 240 members, respectively, under the symmetries of the polytope. A
comparison is made between these critical sets and other such sets in four
dimensions, and the significance of these results is discussed.Comment: 2 new references added, caption to Table 9 correcte