English

Testing microscopic discretization

Quantum Physics 2015-05-30 v3 Probability

Abstract

What can we say about the spectra of a collection of microscopic variables when only their coarse-grained sums are experimentally accessible? In this paper, using the tools and methodology from the study of quantum nonlocality, we develop a mathematical theory of the macroscopic fluctuations generated by ensembles of independent microscopic discrete systems. We provide algorithms to decide which multivariate gaussian distributions can be approximated by sums of finitely-valued random vectors. We study non-trivial cases where the microscopic variables have an unbounded range, as well as asymptotic scenarios with infinitely many macroscopic variables. From a foundational point of view, our results imply that bipartite gaussian states of light cannot be understood as beams of independent d-dimensional particle pairs. It is also shown that the classical description of certain macroscopic optical experiments, as opposed to the quantum one, requires variables with infinite cardinality spectra.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1110.2394,
  title  = {Testing microscopic discretization},
  author = {Miguel Navascues and David Perez-Garcia and Ignacio Villanueva},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1110.2394},
  year   = {2015}
}

Comments

Proof of strong NP-hardness. Connection with random walks. New asymptotic results. Numerous typos corrected

R2 v1 2026-06-21T19:18:36.382Z