The Information Content of Systems in General Physical Theories

What kind of object is a quantum state? Is it an object that encodes an exponentially growing amount of information (in the size of the system) or more akin to a probability distribution? It turns out that these questions are sensitive to what we do with the information. For example, Holevo's b...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ciarán M. Lee, Matty J. Hoban
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Open Publishing Association 2016-06-01
Series:Electronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science
Online Access:http://arxiv.org/pdf/1606.06801v1
id doaj-915e8e92f9d54bc696c7d1653d74b296
record_format Article
spelling doaj-915e8e92f9d54bc696c7d1653d74b2962020-11-25T01:32:09ZengOpen Publishing AssociationElectronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science2075-21802016-06-01214Proc. PC 2016222810.4204/EPTCS.214.5:7The Information Content of Systems in General Physical TheoriesCiarán M. Lee0Matty J. Hoban1 University of Oxford University of Oxford What kind of object is a quantum state? Is it an object that encodes an exponentially growing amount of information (in the size of the system) or more akin to a probability distribution? It turns out that these questions are sensitive to what we do with the information. For example, Holevo's bound tells us that n qubits only encode n bits of classical information but for certain communication complexity tasks there is an exponential separation between quantum and classical resources. Instead of just contrasting quantum and classical physics, we can place both within a broad landscape of physical theories and ask how non-quantum (and non-classical) theories are different from, or more powerful than quantum theory. For example, in communication complexity, certain (non-quantum) theories can trivialise all communication complexity tasks. In recent work [C. M. Lee and M. J. Hoban, Proc. Royal Soc. A 472 (2190), 2016], we showed that the immense power of the information content of states in general (non-quantum) physical theories is not limited to communication complexity. We showed that, in general physical theories, states can be taken as "advice" for computers in these theories and this advice allows the computers to easily solve any decision problem. Aaronson has highlighted the close connection between quantum communication complexity and quantum computations that take quantum advice, and our work gives further indications that this is a very general connection. In this work, we review the results in our previous work and discuss the intricate relationship between communication complexity and computers taking advice for general theories.http://arxiv.org/pdf/1606.06801v1
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ciarán M. Lee
Matty J. Hoban
spellingShingle Ciarán M. Lee
Matty J. Hoban
The Information Content of Systems in General Physical Theories
Electronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science
author_facet Ciarán M. Lee
Matty J. Hoban
author_sort Ciarán M. Lee
title The Information Content of Systems in General Physical Theories
title_short The Information Content of Systems in General Physical Theories
title_full The Information Content of Systems in General Physical Theories
title_fullStr The Information Content of Systems in General Physical Theories
title_full_unstemmed The Information Content of Systems in General Physical Theories
title_sort information content of systems in general physical theories
publisher Open Publishing Association
series Electronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science
issn 2075-2180
publishDate 2016-06-01
description What kind of object is a quantum state? Is it an object that encodes an exponentially growing amount of information (in the size of the system) or more akin to a probability distribution? It turns out that these questions are sensitive to what we do with the information. For example, Holevo's bound tells us that n qubits only encode n bits of classical information but for certain communication complexity tasks there is an exponential separation between quantum and classical resources. Instead of just contrasting quantum and classical physics, we can place both within a broad landscape of physical theories and ask how non-quantum (and non-classical) theories are different from, or more powerful than quantum theory. For example, in communication complexity, certain (non-quantum) theories can trivialise all communication complexity tasks. In recent work [C. M. Lee and M. J. Hoban, Proc. Royal Soc. A 472 (2190), 2016], we showed that the immense power of the information content of states in general (non-quantum) physical theories is not limited to communication complexity. We showed that, in general physical theories, states can be taken as "advice" for computers in these theories and this advice allows the computers to easily solve any decision problem. Aaronson has highlighted the close connection between quantum communication complexity and quantum computations that take quantum advice, and our work gives further indications that this is a very general connection. In this work, we review the results in our previous work and discuss the intricate relationship between communication complexity and computers taking advice for general theories.
url http://arxiv.org/pdf/1606.06801v1
work_keys_str_mv AT ciaranmlee theinformationcontentofsystemsingeneralphysicaltheories
AT mattyjhoban theinformationcontentofsystemsingeneralphysicaltheories
AT ciaranmlee informationcontentofsystemsingeneralphysicaltheories
AT mattyjhoban informationcontentofsystemsingeneralphysicaltheories
_version_ 1725082893600948224