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Trapped Ion Quantum Computing Quantum Simulation Quantum Foundations

Testing quantum theory by generalizing noncontextuality

arXiv
Authors: Markus P. Mueller, Andrew J. P. Garner

Year

2021

Paper ID

40516

Status

Preprint

Abstract Read

~2 min

Abstract Words

218

Citations

N/A

Abstract

It is a fundamental prediction of quantum theory that states of physical systems are described by complex vectors or density operators on a Hilbert space. However, many experiments admit effective descriptions in terms of other state spaces, such as classical probability distributions or quantum systems with superselection rules. Which kind of effective statistics would allow us to experimentally falsify quantum theory as a fundamental description of nature? Here, we address this question by introducing a methodological principle that generalizes Spekkens' notion of noncontextuality: processes that are statistically indistinguishable in an effective theory should not require explanation by multiple distinguishable processes in a more fundamental theory. We formulate this principle in terms of linear embeddings and simulations of one probabilistic theory by another, show how this concept subsumes standard notions of contextuality, and prove a multitude of fundamental results on the exact and approximate embedding of theories (in particular into quantum theory). We prove that only Jordan-algebraic state spaces are exactly embeddable into quantum theory, and show how results on Bell inequalities can be used for the certification of non-approximate embeddability. From this, we propose an experimental test of quantum theory by probing single physical systems without assuming access to a tomographically complete set of procedures or calibration of the devices, arguably avoiding a significant loophole of earlier approaches.

Why This Paper Matters

  • This paper contributes to the Quantum Simulation research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
  • It adds a 2021 reference point for readers tracking recent quantum research.
  • It is a fundamental prediction of quantum theory that states of physical systems are described by complex vectors or density operators on a Hilbert space.

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