Quantum causality relations and the emergence of reality from coherent
superpositions
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2001.11617v3
- Date: Mon, 11 May 2020 00:35:31 GMT
- Title: Quantum causality relations and the emergence of reality from coherent
superpositions
- Authors: Holger F. Hofmann
- Abstract summary: I investigate the relation between the classical notion of reality and quantum superpositions.
It is shown that classical reality emerges at the macroscopic level.
It is possible to demonstrate that the classical notion of objective reality emerges only at the macroscopic level.
- Score: 0.0
- License: http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/
- Abstract: The Hilbert space formalism describes causality as a statistical relation
between initial experimental conditions and final measurement outcomes,
expressed by the inner products of state vectors representing these conditions.
This representation of causality is in fundamental conflict with the classical
notion that causality should be expressed in terms of the continuity of
intermediate realities. Quantum mechanics essentially replaces this continuity
of reality with phase sensitive superpositions, all of which need to interfere
in order to produce the correct conditional probabilities for the observable
input-output relations. In this paper, I investigate the relation between the
classical notion of reality and quantum superpositions by identifying the
conditions under which the intermediate states can have real external effects,
as expressed by measurement operators inserted into the inner product. It is
shown that classical reality emerges at the macroscopic level, where the
relevant limit of the measurement resolution is given by the variance of the
action around the classical solution. It is thus possible to demonstrate that
the classical notion of objective reality emerges only at the macroscopic
level, where observations are limited to low resolutions by a lack of
sufficiently strong intermediate interactions. This result indicates that
causality is more fundamental to physics than the notion of an objective
reality, which means that the apparent contradictions between quantum physics
and classical physics may be resolved by carefully distinguishing between
observable causality and unobservable sequences of hypothetical realities "out
there".
Related papers
- Quantum violations of joint reality [0.0]
We introduce a new criterion of joint reality.
We demonstrate that, according to this criterion, quantum mechanics generally prevents non-commuting observables from having joint elements of reality.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-05-27T16:02:29Z) - Quantum coherence and the principle of microscopic reversibility [0.0]
We study the implications of our findings in the framework of a qubit system interacting with a thermal reservoir.
Our results show that the influence of coherence is more decisive at low temperatures.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-07-17T19:22:46Z) - A Measure-Theoretic Axiomatisation of Causality [55.6970314129444]
We argue in favour of taking Kolmogorov's measure-theoretic axiomatisation of probability as the starting point towards an axiomatisation of causality.
Our proposed framework is rigorously grounded in measure theory, but it also sheds light on long-standing limitations of existing frameworks.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-05-19T13:15:48Z) - Phenomenological Causality [14.817342045377842]
We propose a notion of 'phenomenological causality' whose basic concept is a set of elementary actions.
We argue that it is consistent with the causal Markov condition when the system under consideration interacts with other variables that control the elementary actions.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-11-15T13:05:45Z) - What is nonclassical about uncertainty relations? [0.0]
Uncertainty relations express limits on the extent to which the outcomes of distinct measurements on a single state can be made jointly predictable.
We show that for a class of theories satisfying a particular symmetry property, the functional form of this predictability tradeoff is constrained by noncontextuality to be below a linear curve.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-07-24T17:19:47Z) - Experimentally ruling out joint reality based on operational
completeness [20.56996045100972]
We report a device-independent experiment to confirm that the joint reality of two observables on a single two-level system is incompatible with the assumption of operational completeness.
Our results push the fundamental limit to delineate the quantum-classical boundary and pave the way for exploring relevant problems in other scenarios.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-03-10T08:58:28Z) - Quantum realism: axiomatization and quantification [77.34726150561087]
We build an axiomatization for quantum realism -- a notion of realism compatible with quantum theory.
We explicitly construct some classes of entropic quantifiers that are shown to satisfy almost all of the proposed axioms.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-10-10T18:08:42Z) - Experimental test of quantum causal influences [0.6291681227094761]
Quantum correlations can violate classical bounds on the causal influence even in scenarios where no violation of a Bell inequality is ever possible.
We experimentally observe this new witness of nonclassicality for the first time.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-08-19T21:47:18Z) - Quantum Causal Inference in the Presence of Hidden Common Causes: an
Entropic Approach [34.77250498401055]
We put forth a new theoretical framework for merging quantum information science and causal inference by exploiting entropic principles.
We apply our proposed framework to an experimentally relevant scenario of identifying message senders on quantum noisy links.
This approach can lay the foundations of identifying originators of malicious activity on future multi-node quantum networks.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-04-24T22:45:50Z) - What does the operator algebra of quantum statistics tell us about the
objective causes of observable effects? [0.0]
I explore how the operator formalism accommodates the vast number of possible states and measurements.
The necessity of non-positive elements is demonstrated by the uniquely defined mathematical description of ideal correlations.
The validity of the operator algebra indicates that a consistent explanation of the various uncertainty limited phenomena associated with physical objects is only possible if we learn to accept the fact that the elements of causality cannot be reconciled with a continuation of observable reality in the physical object.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-05-08T02:15:40Z) - Emergence of classical behavior in the early universe [68.8204255655161]
Three notions are often assumed to be essentially equivalent, representing different facets of the same phenomenon.
We analyze them in general Friedmann-Lemaitre- Robertson-Walker space-times through the lens of geometric structures on the classical phase space.
The analysis shows that: (i) inflation does not play an essential role; classical behavior can emerge much more generally; (ii) the three notions are conceptually distinct; classicality can emerge in one sense but not in another.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-04-22T16:38:25Z)
This list is automatically generated from the titles and abstracts of the papers in this site.
This site does not guarantee the quality of this site (including all information) and is not responsible for any consequences.