Quantum contextuality is a feature of the
phenomenology
Phenomenology may refer to:
Art
* Phenomenology (architecture), based on the experience of building materials and their sensory properties
Philosophy
* Phenomenology (philosophy), a branch of philosophy which studies subjective experiences and a ...
of
quantum mechanics
Quantum mechanics is a fundamental theory in physics that provides a description of the physical properties of nature at the scale of atoms and subatomic particles. It is the foundation of all quantum physics including quantum chemistry, ...
whereby measurements of quantum
observables cannot simply be thought of as revealing pre-existing values. Any attempt to do so in a realistic hidden-variable theory leads to values that are dependent upon the choice of the other (compatible) observables which are simultaneously measured (the measurement context). More formally, the measurement result (assumed pre-existing) of a quantum
observable is dependent upon which other
commuting
Commuting is periodically recurring travel between one's place of residence and place of work or study, where the traveler, referred to as a commuter, leaves the boundary of their home community. By extension, it can sometimes be any regul ...
observables
In physics, an observable is a physical quantity that can be measured. Examples include position and momentum. In systems governed by classical mechanics, it is a real-valued "function" on the set of all possible system states. In quantum physi ...
are within the same measurement set.
Contextuality was first demonstrated to be a feature of quantum phenomenology by the
Bell–Kochen–Specker theorem.
The study of contextuality has developed into a major topic of interest in
quantum foundations
Quantum foundations is a discipline of science that seeks to understand the most counter-intuitive aspects of quantum theory, reformulate it and even propose new generalizations thereof. Contrary to other physical theories, such as general relati ...
as the phenomenon crystallises certain non-classical and counter-intuitive aspects of quantum theory. A number of powerful mathematical frameworks have been developed to study and better understand contextuality, from the perspective of
sheaf theory,
graph theory
In mathematics, graph theory is the study of ''graphs'', which are mathematical structures used to model pairwise relations between objects. A graph in this context is made up of '' vertices'' (also called ''nodes'' or ''points'') which are conne ...
,
hypergraphs,
algebraic topology
Algebraic topology is a branch of mathematics that uses tools from abstract algebra to study topological spaces. The basic goal is to find algebraic invariant (mathematics), invariants that classification theorem, classify topological spaces up t ...
, and
probabilistic couplings.
Nonlocality, in the sense of
Bell's theorem, may be viewed as a special case of the more general phenomenon of contextuality, in which measurement contexts contain measurements that are distributed over spacelike separated regions. This follows from Fine's theorem.
Quantum contextuality has been identified as a source of quantum computational speedups and
quantum advantage
In quantum computing, quantum supremacy or quantum advantage is the goal of demonstrating that a programmable quantum device can solve a problem that no classical computer can solve in any feasible amount of time (irrespective of the usefulness of ...
in
quantum computing
Quantum computing is a type of computation whose operations can harness the phenomena of quantum mechanics, such as superposition, interference, and entanglement. Devices that perform quantum computations are known as quantum computers. Though ...
.
Contemporary research has increasingly focused on exploring its utility as a computational resource.
Kochen and Specker
The need for contextuality was discussed informally in 1935 by
Grete Hermann, but it was more than 30 years later when
Simon B. Kochen
Simon Bernhard Kochen (; born 14 August 1934, Antwerp) is a Canadian mathematician, working in the fields of model theory, number theory and quantum mechanics.
Biography
Kochen received his Ph.D. (''Ultrafiltered Products and Arithmetical Extens ...
and
Ernst Specker, and separately
John Bell, constructed proofs that any realistic hidden-variable theory able to explain the phenomenology of quantum mechanics is contextual for systems of
Hilbert space
In mathematics, Hilbert spaces (named after David Hilbert) allow generalizing the methods of linear algebra and calculus from (finite-dimensional) Euclidean vector spaces to spaces that may be infinite-dimensional. Hilbert spaces arise natural ...
dimension three and greater. The Kochen–Specker theorem proves that realistic noncontextual
hidden variable theories cannot reproduce the empirical predictions of quantum mechanics. Such a theory would suppose the following.
# All quantum-mechanical observables may be simultaneously assigned definite values (this is the realism postulate, which is false in standard quantum mechanics, since there are observables which are indefinite in every given quantum state). These global value assignments may deterministically depend on some 'hidden' classical variable which, in turn, may vary stochastically for some classical reason (as in statistical mechanics). The measured assignments of observables may therefore finally stochastically change. This stochasticity is however epistemic and not ontic as in the standard formulation of quantum mechanics.
# Value assignments pre-exist and are independent of the choice of any other observables which, in standard quantum mechanics, are described as commuting with the measured observable, and they are also measured.
# Some functional constraints on the assignments of values for compatible observables are assumed (e.g., they are additive and multiplicative, there are however several versions of this functional requirement).
In addition, Kochen and Specker constructed an explicitly noncontextual hidden variable model for the two-dimensional
qubit case in their paper on the subject,
[S. Kochen and E.P. Specker, "The problem of hidden variables in quantum mechanics", ''Journal of Mathematics and Mechanics'' 17, 59–87 (1967)] thereby completing the characterisation of the dimensionality of quantum systems that can demonstrate contextual behaviour. Bell's proof invoked a weaker version of
Gleason's theorem
In mathematical physics, Gleason's theorem shows that the rule one uses to calculate probabilities in quantum physics, the Born rule, can be derived from the usual mathematical representation of measurements in quantum physics together with the ...
, reinterpreting the theorem to show that quantum contextuality exists only in Hilbert space dimension greater than two.
[Gleason, A. M, "Measures on the closed subspaces of a Hilbert space", ''Journal of Mathematics and Mechanics'' 6, 885–893 (1957).]
Frameworks for contextuality
Sheaf-theoretic framework
The
sheaf-theoretic, or Abramsky–Brandenburger, approach to contextuality initiated by
Samson Abramsky
Samson Abramsky (born 12 March 1953) is Professor of Computer Science at University College London. He was previously the Christopher Strachey Professor of Computing at the University of Oxford, from 2000 to 2021.
He has made contributions to t ...
and
Adam Brandenburger is theory-independent and can be applied beyond quantum theory to any situation in which empirical data arises in contexts. As well as being used to study forms of contextuality arising in quantum theory and other physical theories, it has also been used to study formally equivalent phenomena in
logic
Logic is the study of correct reasoning. It includes both formal and informal logic. Formal logic is the science of deductively valid inferences or of logical truths. It is a formal science investigating how conclusions follow from premises ...
,
relational database
A relational database is a (most commonly digital) database based on the relational model of data, as proposed by E. F. Codd in 1970. A system used to maintain relational databases is a relational database management system (RDBMS). Many relatio ...
s,
natural language processing
Natural language processing (NLP) is an interdisciplinary subfield of linguistics, computer science, and artificial intelligence concerned with the interactions between computers and human language, in particular how to program computers to pro ...
, and
constraint satisfaction.
In essence, contextuality arises when empirical data is ''locally consistent but globally inconsistent''.
This framework gives rise in a natural way to a qualitative hierarchy of contextuality.
*(Probabilistic) contextuality may be witnessed in measurement statistics, e.g. by the violation of an inequality. A representative example is the
KCBS proof of contextuality.
*Logical contextuality may be witnessed in the 'possibilistic' information about which outcome events are possible and which are not possible. A representative example is
Hardy's nonlocality proof of nonlocality.
*Strong contextuality is a maximal form of contextuality. Whereas (probabilistic) contextuality arises when measurement statistics cannot be reproduced by a mixture of global value assignments, strong contextuality arises when no global value assignment is even compatible with the possible outcome events. A representative example is the original Kochen–Specker proof of contextuality.
Each level in this hierarchy strictly includes the next. An important intermediate level that lies strictly between the logical and strong contextuality classes is all-versus-nothing contextuality,
a representative example of which is the
Greenberger–Horne–Zeilinger proof of nonlocality.
Graph and hypergraph frameworks
Adán Cabello,
Simone Severini
Simone Severini is an Italian-born British computer scientist. He is currently Professor of Physics of Information at University College London, and Director of Quantum Computing at Amazon Web Services.
Work
Severini worked in quantum informati ...
, and
Andreas Winter
Andreas J. Winter (born 14 June 1971, Mühldorf, Germany) is a German mathematician and mathematical physicist at the Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona (UAB) in Spain. He received his Ph.D. in 1999 under Rudolf Ahlswede and Friedrich Götze at th ...
introduced a general graph-theoretic framework for studying contextuality of different physical theories. Within this framework experimental scenarios are described by graphs, and certain
invariants of these graphs were shown have particular physical significance. One way in which contextuality may be witnessed in measurement statistics is through the violation of noncontextuality inequalities (also known as generalized Bell inequalities). With respect to certain appropriately normalised inequalities, the
independence number
Independence is a condition of a person, nation, country, or Sovereign state, state in which residents and population, or some portion thereof, exercise self-government, and usually sovereignty, over its territory. The opposite of independ ...
,
Lovász number In graph theory, the Lovász number of a graph is a real number that is an upper bound on the Shannon capacity of the graph. It is also known as Lovász theta function and is commonly denoted by \vartheta(G), using a script form of the Greek letter ...
, and fractional packing number of the graph of an experimental scenario provide tight upper bounds on the degree to which classical theories, quantum theory, and generalised probabilistic theories, respectively, may exhibit contextuality in an experiment of that kind. A more refined framework based on
hypergraphs rather than graphs is also used.
Contextuality-by-Default (CbD) framework
In the CbD approach,
developed by Ehtibar Dzhafarov, Janne Kujala, and colleagues, (non)contextuality is treated as a property of any ''system of random variables'', defined as a set
in which each random variable
is labeled by its ''content''
, the property it measures, and its ''context''
, the set of recorded circumstances under which it is recorded (including but not limited to which other random variables it is recorded together with);
stands for "
is measured in
". The variables within a context are jointly distributed, but variables from different contexts are ''stochastically unrelated'', defined on different sample spaces. A ''(probabilistic) coupling'' of the system
is defined as a system
in which all variables are jointly distributed and, in any context
,
and
are identically distributed. The system is considered noncontextual if it has a coupling
such that the probabilities