Categorical Quantum Mechanics II: Classical-Quantum Interaction
Abstract
This is the second part of a three-part overview, in which we derive the category-theoretic backbone of quantum theory from a process ontology, treating quantum theory as a theory of systems, processes and their interactions. In this part we focus on classical-quantum interaction. Classical and quantum systems are treated as distinct types, of which the respective behavioural properties are specified in terms of processes and their compositions. In particular, classicality is witnessed by 'spiders' which fuse together whenever they connect. We define mixedness and show that pure processes are extremal in the space of all processes, and we define entanglement and show that quantum theory indeed exhibits entanglement. We discuss the classification of tripartite qubit entanglement and show that both the GHZ-state and the W-state come from spider-like families of processes, which differ only in how they behave when they are connected by two or more wires. We define measurements and provide fully-comprehensive descriptions of several quantum protocols involving classical data flow. Finally, we give a notion of 'genuine quantumness', from which special processes called 'phase spiders' arise, and get a first glimpse of quantum non-locality.
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