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Deterministic Underlying States are incompatible with a Counterfactual account of Lüders' rule

Alisson Tezzin, Bárbara Amaral, Jonte R. Hance

Abstract

In this work, we show that a counterfactual account of L"uders' rule -- which we argue is naturally implied by the mathematical structure of the rule itself -- rules out underlying-state models of quantum mechanics (a type of hidden-variable model, typically used in the contextuality and nonlocality literature, where quantum states are treated as probability measures over ``better-defined states''). This incompatibility arises because the counterfactual update requires ontological models to update their states according to conditional probability, which in turn establishes an equivalence between compatibility and the existence of such models.

Deterministic Underlying States are incompatible with a Counterfactual account of Lüders' rule

Abstract

In this work, we show that a counterfactual account of L"uders' rule -- which we argue is naturally implied by the mathematical structure of the rule itself -- rules out underlying-state models of quantum mechanics (a type of hidden-variable model, typically used in the contextuality and nonlocality literature, where quantum states are treated as probability measures over ``better-defined states''). This incompatibility arises because the counterfactual update requires ontological models to update their states according to conditional probability, which in turn establishes an equivalence between compatibility and the existence of such models.

Paper Structure

This paper contains 1 section, 2 theorems, 34 equations.

Table of Contents

  1. Appendix

Key Result

Lemma 1

Let $\mathfrak{S}$ be a finite-dimensional quantum system. Two observables $\hat{A}$ and $\hat{B}$ of $\mathfrak{S}$ are compatible if and only if, for any pure state $\psi$ and values $\alpha \in \sigma(\hat{A})$, $\beta \in\sigma(\hat{B})$,

Theorems & Definitions (2)

  • Lemma 1: Compatibility
  • Proposition 1: Compatibility and underlying states