Programming Research Group
Research Report RR-06-02
Quantum measurements without sums
Bob Coecke and Dusko Pavlovic
July 2006, 30pp.
Abstract
Sums play a prominent role in the formalisms of quantum
mechanics, be it for mixing and superposing states, or for composing state
spaces. Surprisingly, a conceptual analysis of quantum measurement seems
to suggest that quantum mechanics can be done without direct sums,
expressed entirely in terms of the tensor product. The corresponding
axioms define classical spaces as objects that allow copying and deleting
data. Indeed, the information exchange between the quantum and the
classical worlds is essentially determined by their distinct capabilities
to copy and delete data. The sums turn out to be an implicit
implementation of this capabilities. Realizing it through explicit
axioms not only dispenses with the unnecessary structural baggage, but
also allows a simple and intuitive graphical calculus.
In category-theoretic terms, classical data types are dagger-compact
Frobenius algebras, and quantum spectra underlying quantum measurements
are Eilenberg-Moore coalgebras induced by these Frobenius algebras.
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