Quantum Histories and Their Implications

  • Kent A
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Abstract

Classical mechanics and standard Copenhagen quantum mechanics respect subspace implications. For example, if a particle is confined in a particular region $R$ of space, then in these theories we can deduce that it is confined in regions containing $R$. However, subspace implications are generally violated by versions of quantum theory that assign probabilities to histories, such as the consistent histories approach. I define here a new criterion, ordered consistency, which refines the criterion of consistency and has the property that inferences made by ordered consistent sets do not violate subspace relations. This raises the question: do the operators defining our observations form an ordered consistent history? If so, ordered consistency defines a version of quantum theory with greater predictive power than the consistent histories formalism. If not, and our observations are defined by a non-ordered consistent quantum history, then subspace implications are not generally valid.

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Kent, A. (2007). Quantum Histories and Their Implications. In Relativistic Quantum Measurement and Decoherence (pp. 93–115). Springer Berlin Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/3-540-45369-5_5

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