15
IRUS Total
Downloads
  Altmetric

Contextuality under weak assumptions

File Description SizeFormat 
Simmons+et+al_2017_New_J._Phys._10.1088_1367-2630_aa5f72.pdfAccepted version245.7 kBAdobe PDFView/Open
Simmons_2017_New_J._Phys._19_033030.pdfPublished version564.41 kBAdobe PDFView/Open
Title: Contextuality under weak assumptions
Authors: Simmons, A
Wallman, J
Pashayan, H
Bartlett, S
Rudolph, T
Item Type: Journal Article
Abstract: The presence of contextuality in quantum theory was first highlighted by Bell, Kochen and Specker, who discovered that for quantum systems of three or more dimensions, measurements could not be viewed as deterministically revealing pre-existing properties of the system. More precisely, no model can assign deterministic outcomes to the projectors of a quantum measurement in a way that depends only on the projector and not the context (the full set of projectors) in which it appeared, despite the fact that the Born rule probabilities associated with projectors are independent of the context. A more general, operational definition of contextuality introduced by Spekkens, which we will term "probabilistic contextuality", drops the assumption of determinism and allows for operations other than measurements to be considered contextual. Even two-dimensional quantum mechanics can be shown to be contextual under this generalised notion. Probabilistic noncontextuality represents the postulate that elements of an operational theory that cannot be distinguished from each other based on the statistics of arbitrarily many repeated experiments (they give rise to the same operational probabilities) are ontologically identical. In this paper, we introduce a framework that enables us to distinguish between different noncontextuality assumptions in terms of the relationships between the ontological representations of objects in the theory given a certain relation between their operational representations. This framework can be used to motivate and define a "possibilistic" analogue, encapsulating the idea that elements of an operational theory that cannot be unambiguously distinguished operationally can also not be unambiguously distinguished ontologically. We then prove that possibilistic noncontextuality is equivalent to an alternative notion of noncontextuality proposed by Hardy. Finally, we demonstrate that these weaker noncontextuality assumptions are sufficient to prove alternative versions of known "no-go" theorems that constrain ψ-epistemic models for quantum mechanics.
Issue Date: 9-Feb-2017
Date of Acceptance: 9-Feb-2017
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/44433
DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1367-2630/aa5f72
ISSN: 1367-2630
Publisher: IOP Publishing
Journal / Book Title: New Journal of Physics
Volume: 19
Copyright Statement: Original content from this work may be used under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 licence. Any further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the title of the work, journal citation and DOI.
Keywords: Science & Technology
Physical Sciences
Physics, Multidisciplinary
Physics
quantum contextuality
quantum foundations
quantum nonlocality
QUANTUM-MECHANICS
HIDDEN-VARIABLES
INEQUALITIES
NONLOCALITY
quant-ph
02 Physical Sciences
Fluids & Plasmas
Publication Status: Published
Open Access location: http://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1367-2630/aa5f72/pdf
Article Number: 033030
Appears in Collections:Quantum Optics and Laser Science
Physics
Faculty of Natural Sciences