论文标题
有限维度中的量子理论无法用有限记忆来解释每个一般过程
Quantum theory in finite dimension cannot explain every general process with finite memory
论文作者
论文摘要
可以说,通过有限记忆产生的最大类随机过程是由合适的广义概率理论(GPT)中的顺序测量产生的观测值组成的。这些是由在一组可能的线性图下演变的有限维内存构建的,并具有由记忆状态的线性函数确定的结果的概率。此类模型的示例由经典的隐藏马尔可夫进程,其中存储状态为概率分布,并且在每个步骤中,它都会根据非阴性矩阵进化,并在每个步骤中演变,而隐藏的量子马可波夫过程,其中存储状态为有限的维量子状态,并且在每个步骤上,它根据完全正面的映射而演变。在这里,我们表明,承认有限维解释的一组过程不需要用经典概率或量子力学来解释。机智的是,我们展示了具有有限维解释的过程家族,其明显地是由明确给出的GPT的动态定义的,但不承认量子,因此在有限维度中甚至没有经典的解释。此外,我们提出了一个不承认经典有限维实现的量子过程的家族,其中包括Fox,Rubin,Dharmadikari和Nadkarni早期介绍的例子,是无限尺寸Markov链的函数,并降低了经典模型的记忆尺寸。
Arguably, the largest class of stochastic processes generated by means of a finite memory consists of those that are sequences of observations produced by sequential measurements in a suitable generalized probabilistic theory (GPT). These are constructed from a finite-dimensional memory evolving under a set of possible linear maps, and with probabilities of outcomes determined by linear functions of the memory state. Examples of such models are given by classical hidden Markov processes, where the memory state is a probability distribution, and at each step it evolves according to a non-negative matrix, and hidden quantum Markov processes, where the memory state is a finite dimensional quantum state, and at each step it evolves according to a completely positive map. Here we show that the set of processes admitting a finite-dimensional explanation do not need to be explainable in terms of either classical probability or quantum mechanics. To wit, we exhibit families of processes that have a finite-dimensional explanation, defined manifestly by the dynamics of explicitly given GPT, but that do not admit a quantum, and therefore not even classical, explanation in finite dimension. Furthermore, we present a family of quantum processes on qubits and qutrits that do not admit a classical finite-dimensional realization, which includes examples introduced earlier by Fox, Rubin, Dharmadikari and Nadkarni as functions of infinite dimensional Markov chains, and lower bound the size of the memory of a classical model realizing a noisy version of the qubit processes.