No-Signalling Is Equivalent To Free Choice of Measurements

No-Signalling is a fundamental constraint on the probabilistic predictions made by physical theories. It is usually justified in terms of the constraints imposed by special relativity. However, this justification is not as clear-cut as is usually supposed. We shall give a different perspective on th...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Samson Abramsky, Adam Brandenburger, Andrei Savochkin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Open Publishing Association 2014-12-01
Series:Electronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science
Online Access:http://arxiv.org/pdf/1412.8523v1
id doaj-d0d0d8c22a0d4ab78031e78e71f9d950
record_format Article
spelling doaj-d0d0d8c22a0d4ab78031e78e71f9d9502020-11-24T22:46:47ZengOpen Publishing AssociationElectronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science2075-21802014-12-01171Proc. QPL 20131910.4204/EPTCS.171.1:abramskybrandenburgerNo-Signalling Is Equivalent To Free Choice of MeasurementsSamson Abramsky0Adam Brandenburger1Andrei Savochkin2 University of Oxford New York University New Economic School, Moscow No-Signalling is a fundamental constraint on the probabilistic predictions made by physical theories. It is usually justified in terms of the constraints imposed by special relativity. However, this justification is not as clear-cut as is usually supposed. We shall give a different perspective on this condition by showing an equivalence between No-Signalling and Lambda Independence, or "free choice of measurements", a condition on hidden-variable theories which is needed to make no-go theorems such as Bell's theorem non-trivial. More precisely, we shall show that a probability table describing measurement outcomes is No-Signalling if and only if it can be realized by a Lambda-Independent hidden-variable theory of a particular canonical form, in which the hidden variables correspond to non-contextual deterministic predictions of measurement outcomes. The key proviso which avoids contradiction with Bell's theorem is that we consider hidden-variable theories with signed probability measures over the hidden variables - i.e. negative probabilities. Negative probabilities have often been discussed in the literature on quantum mechanics. We use a result proved previously in "The Sheaf-theoretic Structure of Locality and Contextuality" by Abramsky and Brandenburger, which shows that they give rise to, and indeed characterize, the entire class of No-Signalling behaviours. In the present paper, we put this result in a broader context, which reveals the surprising consequence that the No-Signalling condition is equivalent to the apparently completely different notion of free choice of measurements.http://arxiv.org/pdf/1412.8523v1
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Samson Abramsky
Adam Brandenburger
Andrei Savochkin
spellingShingle Samson Abramsky
Adam Brandenburger
Andrei Savochkin
No-Signalling Is Equivalent To Free Choice of Measurements
Electronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science
author_facet Samson Abramsky
Adam Brandenburger
Andrei Savochkin
author_sort Samson Abramsky
title No-Signalling Is Equivalent To Free Choice of Measurements
title_short No-Signalling Is Equivalent To Free Choice of Measurements
title_full No-Signalling Is Equivalent To Free Choice of Measurements
title_fullStr No-Signalling Is Equivalent To Free Choice of Measurements
title_full_unstemmed No-Signalling Is Equivalent To Free Choice of Measurements
title_sort no-signalling is equivalent to free choice of measurements
publisher Open Publishing Association
series Electronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science
issn 2075-2180
publishDate 2014-12-01
description No-Signalling is a fundamental constraint on the probabilistic predictions made by physical theories. It is usually justified in terms of the constraints imposed by special relativity. However, this justification is not as clear-cut as is usually supposed. We shall give a different perspective on this condition by showing an equivalence between No-Signalling and Lambda Independence, or "free choice of measurements", a condition on hidden-variable theories which is needed to make no-go theorems such as Bell's theorem non-trivial. More precisely, we shall show that a probability table describing measurement outcomes is No-Signalling if and only if it can be realized by a Lambda-Independent hidden-variable theory of a particular canonical form, in which the hidden variables correspond to non-contextual deterministic predictions of measurement outcomes. The key proviso which avoids contradiction with Bell's theorem is that we consider hidden-variable theories with signed probability measures over the hidden variables - i.e. negative probabilities. Negative probabilities have often been discussed in the literature on quantum mechanics. We use a result proved previously in "The Sheaf-theoretic Structure of Locality and Contextuality" by Abramsky and Brandenburger, which shows that they give rise to, and indeed characterize, the entire class of No-Signalling behaviours. In the present paper, we put this result in a broader context, which reveals the surprising consequence that the No-Signalling condition is equivalent to the apparently completely different notion of free choice of measurements.
url http://arxiv.org/pdf/1412.8523v1
work_keys_str_mv AT samsonabramsky nosignallingisequivalenttofreechoiceofmeasurements
AT adambrandenburger nosignallingisequivalenttofreechoiceofmeasurements
AT andreisavochkin nosignallingisequivalenttofreechoiceofmeasurements
_version_ 1725683808146030592