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Motivated by some recent comments from Ian, I’ve restarted my “Train Readings” again. I stopped for a while because I’m completely exhausted most of the time and the 30 minute train ride provided a necessary 30 minute vegetative state.
In particular, I started with this:
by Coecke, Pavlovic, and Vicary. The advantage of reading this is there is a good chance I will actually understand it :)
I like this and can’t help relate it to things I’m interested in, but I’ll try to resist for now.
I think it is marginally interesting that “every commutative -Frobenius monoid in FdHilb determines an orthogonal basis.” How about the experts in the room? Is this an interesting result? Is this new? To me, it says that a choice of comultiplication amounts to a choice of a basis, which seems fairly obvious.
What happens to comultiplication under a change of basis?
Let
and
then (assuming is linear)
Now change basis with a new basis dependent comultiplication
we get
Have we gained anything by doing this? Basis dependent maps seem unnatural in my opinion.
I like the idea of categorical quantum mechanics, but I’m not yet convinced that this is the right approach. There must be a more natural way to proceed.
Any ideas?
Personally, I would be tempted to try to interpret the basis vectors as objects and
as a morphism . In this way
might be an identity-assigning morphism.
So maybe what we really want is a category internal to FdHilb. Or something…
I’m just thinking out loud…
Ok. I really can’t resist one more note…
As far as maps , my favorite map is the coboundary
Note
More generally, I think is related the kernel of . This has got to be relevant here.
Question:
Given a 0-category of basis vectors, is it possible to think of a vector as a functor where is the category of 1-dimensional vector spaces? Oh! Or maybe as a colimit of this functor?
I’m not sure how best to say this…
I’m thinking that each object gets sent to a 1-dimensional Hilbert space (or something) with assigning the components, e.g.
where is a scalar and is unit basis vector. The colimit would glob these together into a vector. Or something…
Or maybe put a different way…
Given an object in , if we form the category of elements, is there a way to reconstruct from its elements?
Note: This is an example where if I knew how to precisely formulate my question, it would mean I understood things well enough that I wouldn’t need to ask my question, so please read this with a high degree of flexibility in interpretation of what I’m trying to say.
Note: At category of elements I claimed the elements could be repackaged, but I’m not 100% sure how to do it.
I like the idea of categorical quantum mechanics, but I’m not yet convinced that this is the right approach. There must be a more natural way to proceed.
Well, personally I think the greatest “failing” of QM (and, mind you, it is the most experimentally accurate theory ever devised) is it’s treatment of time as absolute. Rovelli attempted to amend that (Relational QM), but there are some problems with his argument. Nevertheless, it is common to compare the QM notion of a basis with the relativistic notion of a frame.
Since at its core, physics is nothing more than processes, category theory in its purest form seems perfect to describe all of it, QM or otherwise. But then again, I’m a reductionist.
For the sake of argument, let’s assume we are not interest in nature, but a mathematical model of nature. This model, quantum mechanics, is not perfect by any means, but it has a working mathematical foundation. This foundation is generally not presented from the nPOV.
For the purposes of this thread, I hope to think about the model of quantum mechanics (not necessarily a model of nature) and try to formulate it from the nPOV in the most natural way possible.
I think that is what Coecke is also interested in doing.
Specifically, pick up any undergraduate text on quantum mechanics. I’d like to rewrite that book from the nPOV (or cPOV) without getting bogged down by philosophical questions. I’m not trying to come up with a new model of nature. I’m more modestly interested in trying to rewrite the semantics/language of the existing theory. This seems like a worthy effort that might be of some interest to this group.
For example,
Kindergarten Quantum Mechanics
seems to be an effort in a similar direction, but this presentation doesn’t “ring true” to me, so I’m interested in finding an alternative presentation.
@Ian: My understanding is that “classical” QM treats time as absolute, but that QFT is fully special-relativistic and treats time as a class of directions in Minkowski space, just like any other relativistic theory. One could make the analogy you mentioned between bases in QM and frames in SR, but I think it’s just an analogy; the problems of QM are not about time per se.
Maybe we could choose a common reference and try to re-express it in category theoretic terms. Any suggestions?
The Wikipedia page seems like a reasonable place to start:
But, not totally unexpected, the Wikipedia article seems to pull us toward POVM and PVM, which comes full circle to quantum operations.
But, not totally unexpected, the Wikipedia article seems to pull us toward POVM and PVM, which comes full circle to quantum operations.
Caleb O’Loan’s PhD thesis also looks like a great place to start:
Topics in Estimation of Quantum Channels
His Chapter 1 looks nicely paced.
Rewriting classical mechanics would also be fun, and I’m sure is possible, but people are less familiar with thinking of classical mechanics in terms of states and processes.
I’d also propose treating time as discrete so we can avoid “infinitesimal morphisms” for the time being. For example, objects could be QM systems at given times and a morphism takes a QM system at time to time for some finite . This can be made rigorous by integrating the infinitesimal morphisms and will make life easier.
PS: I’ve now created Categorical Quantum Mechanics (ericforgy)
Rewriting classical mechanics would also be fun, and I'm sure is possible, but people are less familiar with thinking of classical mechanics in terms of states and processes.
Right, but I would love to get it so that there was just one way that students thought about physics.
Really? Feynman and Wheeler spent their entire careers encouraging the opposite attitude. Let a thousand flowers bloom! ;-)
Really? Feynman and Wheeler spent their entire careers encouraging the opposite attitude. Let a thousand flowers bloom! ;-)
that attitude is partly why we have yet to achieve a unified theory.
No, Ian, that makes no sense.
No, Ian, that makes no sense.
It might be better to let Feynman speak for himself: Terry Tao posted a link to lectures given by Feynman here. Highly recommended. Professor Tao comments:
Of particular interest to mathematicians is his second lecture “The relation of mathematics and physics”. He draws several important contrasts between the reasoning of physics and the axiomatic reasoning of formal, settled mathematics, of the type found in textbooks; but it is quite striking to me that the reasoning of unsettled mathematics - recent fields in which the precise axioms and theoretical framework has not yet been fully formalised and standardised - matches Feynman’s description of physical reasoning in many ways. I suspect that Feynman’s impressions of mathematics as performed by mathematicians in 1964 may differ a little from the way mathematics is performed today.
To me, Feynman forcefully argued how the basic facts of physics can be arrived at via multitudinous approaches, and that axiomatic frameworks in physics are quite relative and fluid. Therefore a dogmatic attitude on the ’right’ approach is generally to be shunned. Compare Gian-Carlo Rota’s remarks on the phenomenology of mathematics in his Indiscrete Thoughts (which are primary? theorems or definitions?).
Wheeler in his autobiography describes a big sea change in his thinking over the course of his career, roughly from an “all is particle” way of thinking to an “all is wave” way of thinking. Of course that is a gross oversimplification; what really comes across is the fluidity and flexibility of his thinking, away from the ossification which can result from too heavy dependence on axiomatized approaches.
Just one remark on this:
Feynman forcefully argued how the basic facts of physics can be arrived at via multitudinous approaches, and that axiomatic frameworks in physics are quite relative and fluid.
It’s of course entirely possible to have multitudinous approaches and each of them fully axiomatized. And preferably a bunch of theorems relating these axiomatizations.
We see this in those parts of physics that have been pretty much settled: there are several ways to approach and to formalize classical mechanics. And each of them as well as their relationship is pretty well understood mathematically.
I think the main issue is that of the large multitude of vague approaches in physics, a smaller multitude – but still a multitude – will eventually survive and admit formalization. The danger is to pick an appproach for formalization that is not yet ready for it, or to axiomatize the wrong aspect.
There was recently (in terms of years) an interesting incident illustrating this process, where somebody proposed an axiomatization of one of the hottest topics in present fundamental physics research and encountered the criticism that this axiomatization – while certainly axiomaizing something – did not in fact capture what physicists meant to capture and found of interest to capture.
Therefore a dogmatic attitude on the 'right' approach is generally to be shunned.
Language matters. Language is essential to reason, and can’t be gotten rid of so easily with a few new machines. Somewhere along the line - no matter how long that line is - every experiment, every mathematical equation, every pure numerical value will have to find its way into words.
There is no contesting that language matters – a great deal.
I just happen to think we’ll get a lot further if we are all “speaking the same language.”
I think it’s important to be conversant in a number of languages!
I think it's important to be conversant in a number of languages!
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