Issues of control and causation in quantum information theory

<p>Issues of control and causation are central to the Quantum Theory of Computation. Yet there is no place for them in fundamental laws of Physics when expressed in the prevailing conception, i.e., in terms of initial conditions and laws of motion.</p> <p>This thesis aims at arguin...

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मुख्य लेखक: Marletto, C
अन्य लेखक: Ekert, A
स्वरूप: थीसिस
भाषा:English
प्रकाशित: 2013
विषय:
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author Marletto, C
author2 Ekert, A
author_facet Ekert, A
Marletto, C
author_sort Marletto, C
collection OXFORD
description <p>Issues of control and causation are central to the Quantum Theory of Computation. Yet there is no place for them in fundamental laws of Physics when expressed in the prevailing conception, i.e., in terms of initial conditions and laws of motion.</p> <p>This thesis aims at arguing that Constructor Theory, recently proposed by David Deutsch to generalise the quantum theory of computation, is a candidate to provide a theory of control and causation within Physics. To this end, I shall present a physical theory of information that is formulated solely in constructor-theoretic terms, i.e., in terms of which transformations of physical systems are possible and which are impossible. This theory solves the circularity at the foundations of existing information theory; it provides a unifying relation between classical and quantum information, revealing the single property underlying the most distinctive phenomena associated with the latter: the unpredictability of the outcomes of some deterministic processes, the lack of distinguishability of some states, the irreducible perturbation caused by measurement and the existence of locally inaccessible information in composite systems (entanglement).</p> <p>This thesis also aims to investigate the restrictions that quantum theory imposes on copying-like tasks. To this end, I will propose a unifying, picture-independent formulation of the no-cloning theorem. I will also discuss a protocol to accomplish the closely related task of transferring perfectly a quantum state along a spin chain, in the presence of systematic errors. Furthermore, I will address the problem of whether self-replication (as it occurs in living organisms) is compatible with Quantum Mechanics. Some physicists, notably Wigner, have argued that this logic is in fact forbidden by Quantum Mechanics, thus claiming that the latter is not a universal theory. I shall prove that those claims are invalid and that the logic of self-replication is, of course, compatible with Quantum Mechanics.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:dba641e6-feb3-44df-968f-1b9a6564e8362022-03-27T09:12:10ZIssues of control and causation in quantum information theoryThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:dba641e6-feb3-44df-968f-1b9a6564e836Quantum theory (mathematics)Theoretical physicsPhysics and CSEnglishOxford University Research Archive - Valet2013Marletto, CEkert, A<p>Issues of control and causation are central to the Quantum Theory of Computation. Yet there is no place for them in fundamental laws of Physics when expressed in the prevailing conception, i.e., in terms of initial conditions and laws of motion.</p> <p>This thesis aims at arguing that Constructor Theory, recently proposed by David Deutsch to generalise the quantum theory of computation, is a candidate to provide a theory of control and causation within Physics. To this end, I shall present a physical theory of information that is formulated solely in constructor-theoretic terms, i.e., in terms of which transformations of physical systems are possible and which are impossible. This theory solves the circularity at the foundations of existing information theory; it provides a unifying relation between classical and quantum information, revealing the single property underlying the most distinctive phenomena associated with the latter: the unpredictability of the outcomes of some deterministic processes, the lack of distinguishability of some states, the irreducible perturbation caused by measurement and the existence of locally inaccessible information in composite systems (entanglement).</p> <p>This thesis also aims to investigate the restrictions that quantum theory imposes on copying-like tasks. To this end, I will propose a unifying, picture-independent formulation of the no-cloning theorem. I will also discuss a protocol to accomplish the closely related task of transferring perfectly a quantum state along a spin chain, in the presence of systematic errors. Furthermore, I will address the problem of whether self-replication (as it occurs in living organisms) is compatible with Quantum Mechanics. Some physicists, notably Wigner, have argued that this logic is in fact forbidden by Quantum Mechanics, thus claiming that the latter is not a universal theory. I shall prove that those claims are invalid and that the logic of self-replication is, of course, compatible with Quantum Mechanics.</p>
spellingShingle Quantum theory (mathematics)
Theoretical physics
Physics and CS
Marletto, C
Issues of control and causation in quantum information theory
title Issues of control and causation in quantum information theory
title_full Issues of control and causation in quantum information theory
title_fullStr Issues of control and causation in quantum information theory
title_full_unstemmed Issues of control and causation in quantum information theory
title_short Issues of control and causation in quantum information theory
title_sort issues of control and causation in quantum information theory
topic Quantum theory (mathematics)
Theoretical physics
Physics and CS
work_keys_str_mv AT marlettoc issuesofcontrolandcausationinquantuminformationtheory