On Dirac-type correlations
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2512.08068v1
- Date: Mon, 08 Dec 2025 22:07:44 GMT
- Title: On Dirac-type correlations
- Authors: James Fullwood, Boyu Yang,
- Abstract summary: "Local-density operators" are unit trace operators whose marginals are genuine density operators.<n>"Dirac measures" are complex-valued measures on the space of separable projectors associated with two quantum systems.
- Score: 2.0030826298642217
- License: http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/
- Abstract: Quantum correlations often defy an explanation in terms of fundamental notions of classical physics, such as causality, locality, and realism. While the mathematical theory underpinning quantum correlations between spacelike separated systems has been well-established since the 1930s, the mathematical theory for correlations between non-spacelike separated systems is much less developed. In this work, we develop the theory of what we refer to as "local-density operators", which we view as joint states for possibly non-spacelike separated quantum systems. Local-density operators are unit trace operators whose marginals are genuine density operators, which we show not only subsumes the notion of density operator, but also several extensions of the notion of density operator into the spatiotemporal domain, such as pseudo-density operators and quantum states over time. More importantly, we prove a result which establishes a one-to-one correspondence between local-density operators and what we refer to as "Dirac measures", which are complex-valued measures on the space of separable projectors associated with two quantum systems. In the case that one of the systems is the trivial quantum system with a one-dimensional Hilbert space, our result recovers the fundamental result known as Gleason's Theorem, which implies that the Born rule from quantum theory is the only way in which one may assign probabilities to the outcomes of measurements performed on quantum systems in a non-contextual manner. As such, our results establish a direct generalization of Gleason's Theorem to measurements performed on possibly non-spacelike separated systems, thus extending the mathematical theory of quantum correlations across space to quantum correlations across space and time.
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