4.6 Article

Ruling out Higher-Order Interference from Purity Principles

Journal

ENTROPY
Volume 19, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/e19060253

Keywords

higher-order interference; generalised probabilistic theories; Euclidean Jordan algebras

Funding

  1. EPSRC through the Controlled Quantum Dynamics Centre for Doctoral Training
  2. UCL [534936]
  3. Oxford doctoral training scholarship
  4. Oxford-Google DeepMind Graduate Scholarship
  5. European Research Council (ERC) [337603]
  6. Danish Council for Independent Research (Sapere Aude)
  7. VILLUM FONDEN via the QMATH Centre of Excellence [10059]
  8. Government of Canada through the Department of Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada
  9. Province of Ontario through the Ministry of Research, Innovation and Science
  10. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council [1652538, 1374839] Funding Source: researchfish

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As first noted by Rafael Sorkin, there is a limit to quantum interference. The interference pattern formed in a multi-slit experiment is a function of the interference patterns formed between pairs of slits; there are no genuinely new features resulting from considering three slits instead of two. Sorkin has introduced a hierarchy of mathematically conceivable higher-order interference behaviours, where classical theory lies at the first level of this hierarchy and quantum theory theory at the second. Informally, the order in this hierarchy corresponds to the number of slits on which the interference pattern has an irreducible dependence. Many authors have wondered why quantum interference is limited to the second level of this hierarchy. Does the existence of higher-order interference violate some natural physical principle that we believe should be fundamental? In the current work we show that such principles can be found which limit interference behaviour to second-order, or quantum-like, interference, but that do not restrict us to the entire quantum formalism. We work within the operational framework of generalised probabilistic theories, and prove that any theory satisfying Causality, Purity Preservation, Pure Sharpness, and Purificationfour principles that formalise the fundamental character of purity in natureexhibits at most second-order interference. Hence these theories are, at least conceptually, very close to quantum theory. Along the way we show that systems in such theories correspond to Euclidean Jordan algebras. Hence, they are self-dual and, moreover, multi-slit experiments in such theories are described by pure projectors.

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