(Modular) Effect Algebras are Equivalent to (Frobenius) Antispecial Algebras

Effect algebras are one of the generalizations of Boolean algebras proposed in the quest for a quantum logic. Frobenius algebras are a tool of categorical quantum mechanics, used to present various families of observables in abstract, often nonstandard frameworks. Both effect algebras and Frobenius...

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Main Authors: Dusko Pavlovic, Peter-Michael Seidel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Open Publishing Association 2017-01-01
Series:Electronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science
Online Access:http://arxiv.org/pdf/1605.06719v3
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spelling doaj-1f889602194a4ae4a75d81fd7112fa212020-11-25T00:40:25ZengOpen Publishing AssociationElectronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science2075-21802017-01-01236Proc. QPL 201614516010.4204/EPTCS.236.10:36(Modular) Effect Algebras are Equivalent to (Frobenius) Antispecial AlgebrasDusko Pavlovic0Peter-Michael Seidel1 University of Hawaii University of Hawaii Effect algebras are one of the generalizations of Boolean algebras proposed in the quest for a quantum logic. Frobenius algebras are a tool of categorical quantum mechanics, used to present various families of observables in abstract, often nonstandard frameworks. Both effect algebras and Frobenius algebras capture their respective fragments of quantum mechanics by elegant and succinct axioms; and both come with their conceptual mysteries. A particularly elegant and mysterious constraint, imposed on Frobenius algebras to characterize a class of tripartite entangled states, is the antispecial law. A particularly contentious issue on the quantum logic side is the modularity law, proposed by von Neumann to mitigate the failure of distributivity of quantum logical connectives. We show that, if quantum logic and categorical quantum mechanics are formalized in the same framework, then the antispecial law of categorical quantum mechanics corresponds to the natural requirement of effect algebras that the units are each other's unique complements; and that the modularity law corresponds to the Frobenius condition. These correspondences lead to the equivalence announced in the title. Aligning the two formalisms, at the very least, sheds new light on the concepts that are more clearly displayed on one side than on the other (such as e.g. the orthogonality). Beyond that, it may also open up new approaches to deep and important problems of quantum mechanics (such as the classification of complementary observables).http://arxiv.org/pdf/1605.06719v3
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dusko Pavlovic
Peter-Michael Seidel
spellingShingle Dusko Pavlovic
Peter-Michael Seidel
(Modular) Effect Algebras are Equivalent to (Frobenius) Antispecial Algebras
Electronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science
author_facet Dusko Pavlovic
Peter-Michael Seidel
author_sort Dusko Pavlovic
title (Modular) Effect Algebras are Equivalent to (Frobenius) Antispecial Algebras
title_short (Modular) Effect Algebras are Equivalent to (Frobenius) Antispecial Algebras
title_full (Modular) Effect Algebras are Equivalent to (Frobenius) Antispecial Algebras
title_fullStr (Modular) Effect Algebras are Equivalent to (Frobenius) Antispecial Algebras
title_full_unstemmed (Modular) Effect Algebras are Equivalent to (Frobenius) Antispecial Algebras
title_sort (modular) effect algebras are equivalent to (frobenius) antispecial algebras
publisher Open Publishing Association
series Electronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science
issn 2075-2180
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Effect algebras are one of the generalizations of Boolean algebras proposed in the quest for a quantum logic. Frobenius algebras are a tool of categorical quantum mechanics, used to present various families of observables in abstract, often nonstandard frameworks. Both effect algebras and Frobenius algebras capture their respective fragments of quantum mechanics by elegant and succinct axioms; and both come with their conceptual mysteries. A particularly elegant and mysterious constraint, imposed on Frobenius algebras to characterize a class of tripartite entangled states, is the antispecial law. A particularly contentious issue on the quantum logic side is the modularity law, proposed by von Neumann to mitigate the failure of distributivity of quantum logical connectives. We show that, if quantum logic and categorical quantum mechanics are formalized in the same framework, then the antispecial law of categorical quantum mechanics corresponds to the natural requirement of effect algebras that the units are each other's unique complements; and that the modularity law corresponds to the Frobenius condition. These correspondences lead to the equivalence announced in the title. Aligning the two formalisms, at the very least, sheds new light on the concepts that are more clearly displayed on one side than on the other (such as e.g. the orthogonality). Beyond that, it may also open up new approaches to deep and important problems of quantum mechanics (such as the classification of complementary observables).
url http://arxiv.org/pdf/1605.06719v3
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