English

Quantum Information: What Is It All About?

Quantum Physics 2017-12-04 v2

Abstract

This paper answers Bell's question: What does quantum information refer to? It is about quantum properties represented by subspaces of the quantum Hilbert space, or their projectors, to which standard (Kolmogorov) probabilities can be assigned by using a projective decomposition of the identity (PDI or framework) as a quantum sample space. The single framework rule of consistent histories prevents paradoxes or contradictions. When only one framework is employed, classical (Shannon) information theory can be imported unchanged into the quantum domain. A particular case is the macroscopic world of classical physics whose quantum description needs only a single quasiclassical framework. Nontrivial issues unique to quantum information, those with no classical analog, arise when aspects of two or more incompatible frameworks are compared.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1710.08520,
  title  = {Quantum Information: What Is It All About?},
  author = {Robert B. Griffiths},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1710.08520},
  year   = {2017}
}

Comments

14 pages. v2:Minor changes in title, abstract, Sec. 7. References added and corrected

R2 v1 2026-06-22T22:23:24.366Z