Is there an additional assumption in the PBR theorem?

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In summary, the PBR theorem states that a quantum state must be ontic, and this is demonstrated through a hypothetical scenario involving two qubits prepared in independent states and then measured. However, there is an additional assumption that the ontic state remains unchanged during the measurement, which is necessary to prove the theorem. Without this assumption, the theorem cannot be established.
  • #106
DarMM said:
This cannot be written as ##\mu(r,\theta)rdrd\theta##.

Is this because the average for the measure is taken at just one value ##r = R##, so, heuristically, the measure is a delta function in ##r## and so is not normalizable?
 
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  • #107
PeterDonis said:
Is this because the average for the measure is taken at just one value ##r = R##, so, heuristically, the measure is a delta function in ##r## and so is not normalizable?
Basically yes. There are more complex examples, but in most cases measures not absolutely continuous with respect to the Lebesgue measure involve sums of delta-functions of some kind (which is technically not actually a function and thus writing it under an integral in the way physicists do is strictly speaking invalid).
 
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  • #108
A more complex set of examples would be:
$$\int_{\mathbb{R}}{f(x)d\mu} = 0, supp(f) \not\subset \mathcal{C}$$
That is the integral of a function under this class of measures is zero for functions without support on the Cantor set.

This isn't a unique measure as I haven't defined its action on the Cantor set, but I hope it conveys the point.

EDIT: Previous example I posted doesn't properly define a measure, but a distribution
 
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  • #109
PeterDonis said:
Not at all, go ahead!
I have received the answer from Matt Leifer, which I quote without discarding anything:

"What does the ontic state after the measurement have to do with anything? The argument is entirely about the state of affairs between preparation and measurement."

Not very impressive, IMHO.
 
  • #110
I believe that the standard terminology is that a measure is absolutely continuous with respect to another measure, not regular with respect to.
 
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  • #111
Demystifier said:
"What does the ontic state after the measurement have to do with anything? The argument is entirely about the state of affairs between preparation and measurement."
This is essentially what I've been arguing above, the proof only refers to input states (quantum and ontic) and response functions. The contradiction can be derived entirely in that context.
 
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  • #112
martinbn said:
I believe that the standard terminology is that a measure is absolutely continuous with respect to another measure, not regular with respect to.
You're right of course.

@PeterDonis , "regular" above should be "absolutely continuous", i.e. "absolutely continuous with respect to the Lebesgue measure".

EDIT: Edited previous posts to reflect this for anybody reading it later.
 
  • #113
Demystifier said:
Not very impressive, IMHO.

DarMM said:
This is essentially what I've been arguing above

I agree that Leifer's response seems to be the same general response that @DarMM has been giving in this thread. Let me try to restate what I think this response is saying.

We have an ontic state ##\lambda## that, by construction, lies in the support of all four of the possible input product quantum states. Since each input product state is orthogonal to one of the four possible outcome quantum states, this ontic state must lead to a prediction of zero probability for all four of the possible outcome quantum states, which of course cannot be consistent with the predictions of QM. The reason for this is not, as I had thought, that the ontic state ##\lambda## itself cannot lie in the support of any of the four possible outcome quantum states. It is that Equation 9 in the Leifer paper, which is said to be required for predictions of an ontic model to be consistent with QM, has as an obvious consequence that, if an ontic state lies in the support of some quantum state ##\psi##, the response function for that ontic state must predict zero probability for any quantum state that is orthogonal to ##\psi##. This does not make any assumption about the dynamics or what the outcome ontic state is.

I still want to think some more about the implications of this and what it would mean for an ontic model to violate Equation 9, but it does seem clear after looking through the Leifer paper again that Equation 9 is an explicit assumption of the PBR theorem (not just that theorem, it applies much more generally, but that theorem does have it as an explicit assumption), and that Equation 9 does the same logical work as what I thought was an unstated assumption of the theorem. So I'm now convinced that there isn't an additional unstated assumption required to prove the PBR theorem--or at least not the one I thought.
 
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  • #114
PeterDonis said:
I still want to think some more about the implications of this and what it would mean for an ontic model to violate Equation 9
One possibility is that you could change:
$$\mu_{\rho}(\lambda)$$
to
$$\mu_{\rho,M}(\lambda)$$

That is the likelihood of an ontic state depends on the future measurement, i.e. retrocausal or acausal theories. This escapes the PBR result.

You might also reject the PIP via the presence of wormholes or some other omnipresent nontriviality in spacetime that permits things to be interdependent at preparation. Similarly this escapes the result. However Leifer has proven bounds that make this one unlikely.
 
  • #115
zonde said:
I can perform measurement that gives output for state ##\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}(|0\rangle|-\rangle + |1\rangle|+\rangle)##. That's not the question.
The question is about performing measurement that gives outputs for states ##\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}(|0\rangle|1\rangle + |1\rangle|0\rangle)## and ##\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}(|0\rangle|-\rangle + |1\rangle|+\rangle)##
PeterDonis said:
Why wouldn't you be able to do this? The four output states described in the PBR paper are all orthogonal to each other and span the Hilbert space; therefore they must be eigenstates of some Hermitian operator, so there must be some measurement that has these states as its possible outcome states.
zonde said:
If I wish I can write all four measurements in the same basis and then do the PBR reasoning. So my objections do not matter.
So I test this approach.
I rewrite these four measurement states:
##|\xi_1\rangle=\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}(|0\rangle\otimes|1\rangle+|1\rangle\otimes|0\rangle)##
##|\xi_2\rangle=\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}(|0\rangle\otimes|-\rangle+|1\rangle\otimes|+\rangle)##
##|\xi_3\rangle=\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}(|+\rangle\otimes|1\rangle+|-\rangle\otimes|0\rangle)##
##|\xi_4\rangle=\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}(|+\rangle\otimes|-\rangle+|-\rangle\otimes|+\rangle)##

as:
##|\xi_1\rangle=\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}(|0\rangle\otimes|1\rangle+|1\rangle\otimes|0\rangle)##
##|\xi_2\rangle=\frac{1}{2}(|0\rangle\otimes|0\rangle+|1\rangle\otimes|1\rangle-0\rangle\otimes|1\rangle+|1\rangle\otimes|0\rangle)##
##|\xi_3\rangle=\frac{1}{2}(|0\rangle\otimes|0\rangle+|1\rangle\otimes|1\rangle+0\rangle\otimes|1\rangle-|1\rangle\otimes|0\rangle)##
##|\xi_4\rangle=\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}(|0\rangle\otimes|0\rangle-|1\rangle\otimes|1\rangle)##

But know I have another problem, measurements ##|\xi_2\rangle## and ##|\xi_3\rangle## are not operationally meaningful at least for photons. There is no measurement that can perform such a four way interference. Two way interference (like in ##|\xi_1\rangle## and ##|\xi_4\rangle##) can be performed by swapping measurement contexts of the two photons i.e. ##|0_A\rangle## mode is measured against ##|1_B\rangle## mode. But that approach is meaningless for four way interference.
Of course ##|\xi_2\rangle## and ##|\xi_3\rangle## could be measured if I express them in different basis, but that brings me back to starting point.
 
  • #116
The projector ##|\xi_2\rangle\langle \xi_2|## can be expressed in different bases, but that wouldn't affect its measurability, you either have device that can measure it or not.
 
  • #117
DarMM said:
The projector ##|\xi_2\rangle\langle \xi_2|## can be expressed in different bases, but that wouldn't affect its measurability, you either have device that can measure it or not.
The question is not about measurability of any separate measurement state. The question is about combining all four measurement states into single measurement with four outcomes.
 
  • #118
zonde said:
The question is not about measurability of any separate measurement state. The question is about combining all four measurement states into single measurement with four outcomes.
Wouldn't the measurability of such a PVM again not depend on the basis? Basically I don't understand how the basis matters.
 
  • #119
DarMM said:
Wouldn't the measurability of such a PVM again not depend on the basis? Basically I don't understand how the basis matters.
I don't know if there is some general rule about possibility to implement some measurement.
In PBR four measurement states are expressed in different bases. The way I see it's sort of obvious that experimental equipment can't make one photon mode interact with two incompatible other photon modes at the same time. The way out would be to express all four measurement states in the same basis. The choice of basis should not matter as long as it's the same for all four measurements.
 
  • #120
zonde said:
The way out would be to express all four measurement states in the same basis.

The four measurement states are a basis. They are all orthogonal, and there are four of them, which is sufficient to span the Hilbert space.
 
  • #121
zonde said:
I don't know if there is some general rule about possibility to implement some measurement.

Any set of orthogonal vectors that span a Hilbert space must be eigenvectors of some Hermitian operator on that Hilbert space.
 

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