Hidden Variables Simulating Quantum Contextuality Increasingly Violate the Holevo Bound
نویسندگان
چکیده
In this paper we approach some questions about quantum contextuality with tools from formal logic. In particular, we consider an experiment associated with the PeresMermin square. The language of all possible sequences of outcomes of the experiment is classified in the Chomsky hierarchy and seen to be a regular language. Next, we make the rather evident observation that a finite set of hidden finite valued variables can never account for indeterminism in an ideally isolated repeatable experiment. We see that, when the language of possible outcomes of the experiment is regular, as is the case with the Peres-Mermin square, the amount of binary-valued hidden variables needed to de-randomize the model for all sequences of experiments up to length n grows as bad as it could be: linearly in n. We introduce a very abstract model of machine that simulates nature in a particular sense. A lower-bound on the number of memory states of such machines is proved if they were to simulate the experiment that corresponds to the Peres-Mermin square. Moreover, the proof of this lower bound is seen to scale to a certain generalization of the PeresMermin square. For this scaled experiment it is seen that the Holevo bound is violated and that the degree of violation increases uniformly.
منابع مشابه
Advanced Analysis of Quantum Contextuality in a Psychophysical Double-Detection Experiment
The results of behavioral experiments typically exhibit inconsistent connectedness, i.e., they violate the condition known as “no-signaling,” “no-disturbance,” or “marginal selectivity.” This prevents one from evaluating these experiments in terms of quantum contextuality if the latter understood traditionally (as, e.g., in the Kochen-Specker theorem or Bell-type inequalities). The Contextualit...
متن کاملVon Neumann’s Impossibility Proof: Mathematics in the Service of Rhetorics
According to what has become a standard history of quantum mechanics, von Neumann in 1932 succeeded in convincing the physics community that he had proved that hidden variables were impossible as a matter of principle. Subsequently, leading proponents of the Copenhagen interpretation emphatically confirmed that von Neumann’s proof showed the completeness of quantum mechanics. Then, the story co...
متن کاملPreparation contextuality powers parity-oblivious multiplexing.
In a noncontextual hidden variable model of quantum theory, hidden variables determine the outcomes of every measurement in a manner that is independent of how the measurement is implemented. Using a generalization of this notion to arbitrary operational theories and to preparation procedures, we demonstrate that a particular two-party information-processing task, "parity-oblivious multiplexing...
متن کاملMeasurement - Disturbance and Contextuality
Many seemingly paradoxical effects are known in the predictions for outcomes of measurements made on preand post-selected quantum systems. A class of such effects, which we call “logical preand post-selection paradoxes”, bear a striking resemblance to proofs of the Bell-Kochen-Specker theorem, which suggests that they demonstrate the contextuality of quantum mechanics. Despite the apparent simi...
متن کاملParadoxes , Measurement - Disturbance and Contextuality
Many seemingly paradoxical effects are known in the predictions for outcomes of measurements made on preand post-selected quantum systems. A class of such effects, which we call “logical preand post-selection paradoxes”, bear a striking resemblance to proofs of the Bell-Kochen-Specker theorem, which suggests that they demonstrate the contextuality of quantum mechanics. Despite the apparent simi...
متن کامل