| Literature DB >> 26392075 |
Abstract
The existence of observables that are incompatible or not jointly measurable is a characteristic feature of quantum mechanics, which lies at the root of a number of nonclassical phenomena, such as uncertainty relations, wave--particle dual behavior, Bell-inequality violation, and contextuality. However, no intuitive criterion is available for determining the compatibility of even two (generalized) observables, despite the overarching importance of this problem and intensive efforts of many researchers. Here we introduce an information theoretic paradigm together with an intuitive geometric picture for decoding incompatible observables, starting from two simple ideas: Every observable can only provide limited information and information is monotonic under data processing. By virtue of quantum estimation theory, we introduce a family of universal criteria for detecting incompatible observables and a natural measure of incompatibility, which are applicable to arbitrary number of arbitrary observables. Based on this framework, we derive a family of universal measurement uncertainty relations, provide a simple information theoretic explanation of quantitative wave--particle duality, and offer new perspectives for understanding Bell nonlocality, contextuality, and quantum precision limit.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26392075 PMCID: PMC4585721 DOI: 10.1038/srep14317
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Metric-adjusted complementarity chambers.
(a) Chambers (green cones, with modified size and aspect ratio for ease of viewing) on the probability simplex with respect to the Fisher—Rao metric45. (b) Chambers on the state space of the real qubit with respect to the quantum Fisher information metric. Each red cone represents the set of hypothetical Fisher information matrices satisfying the SLD bound but excluded by the GM inequality.
Figure 2Information geometry of qubit observables.
The largest green cone represents the complementarity chamber at the completely mixed state (cf. Fig. 1). The two upward red cones represent the sets of hypothetical Fisher information matrices lower bounded by the Fisher information matrices of two sharp von Neumann observables (corresponding to the tips of the cones), respectively. The two observables are incompatible since the intersection of the two cones is disjoint from the complementarity chamber. The distance from the intersection to the base of the complementarity chamber quantifies the degree of incompatibility. By contrast, their noisy versions corresponding to the tips of the two smaller green cones are compatible.