Contextuality and noncommutative geometry in quantum mechanics

Observable properties of a classical physical system can be modelled deterministically as functions from the space of pure states to outcome values; dually, states can be modelled as functions from the algebra of observables to outcome values. The probabilistic predictions of quantum physics are con...

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Hlavní autoři: De Silva, N, Barbosa, RS
Médium: Journal article
Jazyk:English
Vydáno: Springer Berlin Heidelberg 2019
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author De Silva, N
Barbosa, RS
author_facet De Silva, N
Barbosa, RS
author_sort De Silva, N
collection OXFORD
description Observable properties of a classical physical system can be modelled deterministically as functions from the space of pure states to outcome values; dually, states can be modelled as functions from the algebra of observables to outcome values. The probabilistic predictions of quantum physics are contextual in that they preclude this classical assumption of reality: noncommuting observables, which are not assumed to be jointly measurable, cannot be consistently ascribed deterministic values even if one enriches the description of a quantum state. Here, we consider the geometrically dual objects of noncommutative operator algebras of observables as being generalisations of classical (deterministic) state spaces to the quantum setting and argue that these generalised state spaces represent the objects of study of noncommutative operator geometry. By adapting the spectral presheaf of Hamilton–Isham–Butterfield, a formulation of quantum state space that collates contextual data, we reconstruct tools of noncommutative geometry in an explicitly geometric fashion. In this way, we bridge the foundations of quantum mechanics with the foundations of noncommutative geometry à la Connes et al. To each unital C∗-algebra A we associate a geometric object—a diagram of topological spaces collating quotient spaces of the noncommutative space underlying A—that performs the role of a generalised Gel'fand spectrum. We show how any functor F from compact Hausdorff spaces to a suitable target category C can be applied directly to these geometric objects to automatically yield an extension F˜ acting on all unital C∗-algebras. This procedure is used to give a novel formulation of the operator K0-functor via a finitary variant K˜ f of the extension K˜ of the topological K-functor. We then delineate a C∗-algebraic conjecture that the extension of the functor that assigns to a topological space its lattice of open sets assigns to a unital C∗-algebra the Zariski topological lattice of its primitive ideal spectrum, i.e. its lattice of closed two-sided ideals. We prove the von Neumann algebraic analogue of this conjecture.
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spelling oxford-uuid:695b4c9f-7b7e-44fe-aa3f-4d253adbebad2022-03-26T18:50:39ZContextuality and noncommutative geometry in quantum mechanicsJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:695b4c9f-7b7e-44fe-aa3f-4d253adbebadEnglishSymplectic Elements at OxfordSpringer Berlin Heidelberg2019De Silva, NBarbosa, RSObservable properties of a classical physical system can be modelled deterministically as functions from the space of pure states to outcome values; dually, states can be modelled as functions from the algebra of observables to outcome values. The probabilistic predictions of quantum physics are contextual in that they preclude this classical assumption of reality: noncommuting observables, which are not assumed to be jointly measurable, cannot be consistently ascribed deterministic values even if one enriches the description of a quantum state. Here, we consider the geometrically dual objects of noncommutative operator algebras of observables as being generalisations of classical (deterministic) state spaces to the quantum setting and argue that these generalised state spaces represent the objects of study of noncommutative operator geometry. By adapting the spectral presheaf of Hamilton–Isham–Butterfield, a formulation of quantum state space that collates contextual data, we reconstruct tools of noncommutative geometry in an explicitly geometric fashion. In this way, we bridge the foundations of quantum mechanics with the foundations of noncommutative geometry à la Connes et al. To each unital C∗-algebra A we associate a geometric object—a diagram of topological spaces collating quotient spaces of the noncommutative space underlying A—that performs the role of a generalised Gel'fand spectrum. We show how any functor F from compact Hausdorff spaces to a suitable target category C can be applied directly to these geometric objects to automatically yield an extension F˜ acting on all unital C∗-algebras. This procedure is used to give a novel formulation of the operator K0-functor via a finitary variant K˜ f of the extension K˜ of the topological K-functor. We then delineate a C∗-algebraic conjecture that the extension of the functor that assigns to a topological space its lattice of open sets assigns to a unital C∗-algebra the Zariski topological lattice of its primitive ideal spectrum, i.e. its lattice of closed two-sided ideals. We prove the von Neumann algebraic analogue of this conjecture.
spellingShingle De Silva, N
Barbosa, RS
Contextuality and noncommutative geometry in quantum mechanics
title Contextuality and noncommutative geometry in quantum mechanics
title_full Contextuality and noncommutative geometry in quantum mechanics
title_fullStr Contextuality and noncommutative geometry in quantum mechanics
title_full_unstemmed Contextuality and noncommutative geometry in quantum mechanics
title_short Contextuality and noncommutative geometry in quantum mechanics
title_sort contextuality and noncommutative geometry in quantum mechanics
work_keys_str_mv AT desilvan contextualityandnoncommutativegeometryinquantummechanics
AT barbosars contextualityandnoncommutativegeometryinquantummechanics