4.6 Article

Information-Theoretic Models for Physical Observables

Journal

ENTROPY
Volume 25, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/e25101448

Keywords

information geometry; Fisher's information; Riemannian manifolds; Schrodinger's equation; principle of minimum Fisher's information; quantum harmonic oscillator; Bayes' theorem

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This work introduces a mathematical framework based on information geometry to understand the relationship between physical matter and information theory. It explores how information can be represented and distributed over quantum harmonic oscillators, and demonstrates the quantization and lower bound of the estimator's variance. The study also connects quantum harmonic oscillators with Bayes' theorem, showing the relationship between the global probability density function and the sources of information.
This work addresses J.A. Wheeler's critical idea that all things physical are information-theoretic in origin. In this paper, we introduce a novel mathematical framework based on information geometry, using the Fisher information metric as a particular Riemannian metric, defined in the parameter space of a smooth statistical manifold of normal probability distributions. Following this approach, we study the stationary states with the time-independent Schrodinger's equation to discover that the information could be represented and distributed over a set of quantum harmonic oscillators, one for each independent source of data, whose coordinate for each oscillator is a parameter of the smooth statistical manifold to estimate. We observe that the estimator's variance equals the energy levels of the quantum harmonic oscillator, proving that the estimator's variance is definitively quantized, being the minimum variance at the minimum energy level of the oscillator. Interestingly, we demonstrate that quantum harmonic oscillators reach the Cramer-Rao lower bound on the estimator's variance at the lowest energy level. In parallel, we find that the global probability density function of the collective mode of a set of quantum harmonic oscillators at the lowest energy level equals the posterior probability distribution calculated using Bayes' theorem from the sources of information for all data values, taking as a prior the Riemannian volume of the informative metric. Interestingly, the opposite is also true, as the prior is constant. Altogether, these results suggest that we can break the sources of information into little elements: quantum harmonic oscillators, with the square modulus of the collective mode at the lowest energy representing the most likely reality, supporting A. Zeilinger's recent statement that the world is not broken into physical but informational parts.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available