Classical and Quantum Measurement Theory
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2201.04667v2
- Date: Tue, 18 Jan 2022 16:11:05 GMT
- Title: Classical and Quantum Measurement Theory
- Authors: Peter Morgan
- Abstract summary: We introduce noncommutativity into classical measurement theory.
We also add quantum noise, differentiated from thermal noise by Poincar'e invariance.
This unification allows us to discuss a unified measurement theory for geometry in physics.
- Score: 0.0
- License: http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/
- Abstract: Classical and quantum measurement theories are usually held to be different
because the algebra of classical measurements is commutative, however the
Poisson bracket allows noncommutativity to be added naturally. After we
introduce noncommutativity into classical measurement theory, we can also add
quantum noise, differentiated from thermal noise by Poincar\'e invariance. With
these two changes, the extended classical and quantum measurement theories are
equally capable, so we may speak of a single "measurement theory". The
reconciliation of general relativity and quantum theory has been long delayed
because classical and quantum systems have been thought to be very different,
however this unification allows us to discuss a unified measurement theory for
geometry in physics.
Related papers
- An ontological description for relativistic, massive bosons [0.0]
Locality holds for the quantum theory, and seems to be fully obeyed also by the classical treatment.
We do discuss extensively the distinction between the quantum treatment and the classical one, even though they produce exactly the same equations mathematically.
It is suggested to apply this theory for real time quantum model simulations.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-06-16T14:53:02Z) - Connecting classical finite exchangeability to quantum theory [69.62715388742298]
Exchangeability is a fundamental concept in probability theory and statistics.
We show how a de Finetti-like representation theorem for finitely exchangeable sequences requires a mathematical representation which is formally equivalent to quantum theory.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-06-06T17:15:19Z) - Quantum Instability [30.674987397533997]
We show how a time-independent, finite-dimensional quantum system can give rise to a linear instability corresponding to that in the classical system.
An unstable quantum system has a richer spectrum and a much longer recurrence time than a stable quantum system.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-08-05T19:53:46Z) - Correspondence Between the Energy Equipartition Theorem in Classical
Mechanics and its Phase-Space Formulation in Quantum Mechanics [62.997667081978825]
In quantum mechanics, the energy per degree of freedom is not equally distributed.
We show that in the high-temperature regime, the classical result is recovered.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-05-24T20:51:03Z) - A tensor norm approach to quantum compatibility [1.5229257192293197]
Measurement incompatibility is one of the most striking examples of how quantum physics is different from classical physics.
Two measurements are incompatible if they cannot arise via classical post-processing from a third one.
Recent results on the maximal noise robustness of incompatible measurements have been obtained.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-02-28T17:53:20Z) - Gravity, Quantum Fields and Quantum Information: Problems with classical
channel and stochastic theories [0.0]
We show that the notion of interactions mediated by an information channel is not, in general, equivalent to the treatment of interactions by quantum field theory.
Second, we point out that in general one cannot replace a quantum field by that of classical sources, or mock up the effects of quantum fluctuations by classical noises.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-02-06T14:55:46Z) - Weyl Geometry and Quantum Corrections [0.0]
Weyl Geometry can be used to merge quantum theory and general relativity consistently as classical field theories.
In the Weyl Geometric framework, it seems that both quantum theory and gravity can merge consistently, once quantum theory is geometrized.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-12-24T06:38:02Z) - Quantum indistinguishability through exchangeable desirable gambles [69.62715388742298]
Two particles are identical if all their intrinsic properties, such as spin and charge, are the same.
Quantum mechanics is seen as a normative and algorithmic theory guiding an agent to assess her subjective beliefs represented as (coherent) sets of gambles.
We show how sets of exchangeable observables (gambles) may be updated after a measurement and discuss the issue of defining entanglement for indistinguishable particle systems.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-05-10T13:11:59Z) - 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) - From a quantum theory to a classical one [117.44028458220427]
We present and discuss a formal approach for describing the quantum to classical crossover.
The method was originally introduced by L. Yaffe in 1982 for tackling large-$N$ quantum field theories.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-04-01T09:16:38Z) - A postquantum theory of classical gravity? [0.0]
We present an alternative approach by constructing a consistent theory of classical gravity coupled to quantum field theory.
The dynamics doesn't suffer from the pathologies of the semiclassical theory based on expectation values.
One can view the classical-quantum theory as fundamental or as an effective theory useful for computing the backreaction of quantum fields on geometry.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2018-11-07T19:10:10Z)
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.