English

A categorical semantics of quantum protocols

Quantum Physics 2009-09-29 v5 Logic in Computer Science Mathematical Physics Category Theory math.MP

Abstract

We study quantum information and computation from a novel point of view. Our approach is based on recasting the standard axiomatic presentation of quantum mechanics, due to von Neumann, at a more abstract level, of compact closed categories with biproducts. We show how the essential structures found in key quantum information protocols such as teleportation, logic-gate teleportation, and entanglement-swapping can be captured at this abstract level. Moreover, from the combination of the --apparently purely qualitative-- structures of compact closure and biproducts there emerge `scalars` and a `Born rule'. This abstract and structural point of view opens up new possibilities for describing and reasoning about quantum systems. It also shows the degrees of axiomatic freedom: we can show what requirements are placed on the (semi)ring of scalars C(I,I), where C is the category and I is the tensor unit, in order to perform various protocols such as teleportation. Our formalism captures both the information-flow aspect of the protocols (see quant-ph/0402014), and the branching due to quantum indeterminism. This contrasts with the standard accounts, in which the classical information flows are `outside' the usual quantum-mechanical formalism.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.quant-ph/0402130,
  title  = {A categorical semantics of quantum protocols},
  author = {Samson Abramsky and Bob Coecke},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:quant-ph/0402130},
  year   = {2009}
}

Comments

Significant additions and modifications as compared to the previous version (abstract inner-products, simplified presentation of abstract quantum mechanics). 21 pages, some pictures, some diagrams. 2007 replacement: source had become incompatible with Paul taylor's latest update of his Diagrams package so update was needed