scholarly journals Quantum theory of the classical: quantum jumps, Born’s Rule and objective classical reality via quantum Darwinism

Author(s):  
Wojciech Hubert Zurek

The emergence of the classical world from the quantum substrate of our Universe is a long-standing conundrum. In this paper, I describe three insights into the transition from quantum to classical that are based on the recognition of the role of the environment. I begin with the derivation of preferred sets of states that help to define what exists—our everyday classical reality. They emerge as a result of the breaking of the unitary symmetry of the Hilbert space which happens when the unitarity of quantum evolutions encounters nonlinearities inherent in the process of amplification—of replicating information. This derivation is accomplished without the usual tools of decoherence, and accounts for the appearance of quantum jumps and the emergence of preferredpointer statesconsistent with those obtained via environment-induced superselection, oreinselection. The pointer states obtained in this way determine what can happen—define events—without appealing to Born’s Rule for probabilities. Therefore,pk=|ψk|2can now be deduced from the entanglement-assisted invariance, orenvariance—a symmetry of entangled quantum states. With probabilities at hand, one also gains new insights into the foundations of quantum statistical physics. Moreover, one can now analyse the information flows responsible for decoherence. These information flows explain how the perception of objective classical reality arises from the quantum substrate: the effective amplification that they represent accounts for the objective existence of the einselected states of macroscopic quantum systems through the redundancy of pointer state records in their environment—throughquantum Darwinism.This article is part of a discussion meeting issue ‘Foundations of quantum mechanics and their impact on contemporary society’.

Author(s):  
Wojciech Hubert Zurek

Emergence of the classical from the quantum substrate is a long-standing conundrum. The chapter describes its resolution based on three insights that stem from the recognition of the role of the environment. The chapter begins with the derivation of preferred states that define “events”, the essence of everyday classical reality. They arise from the tension between the unitary quantum dynamics and the nonlinear amplification inherent in replicating information. The resulting pointer states are consistent with these obtained via environment-induced superselection (einselection). They determine what can happen by defining events such as quantum jumps without appealing to Born’s rule for probabilities. Probabilities can be now deduced from envariance (a symmetry of entangled quantum states). With probabilities at hand one can quantify information flows accompanying decoherence. Effective amplification they represent explains perception of objective classical reality arising from within the quantum universe through redundancy of the pointer state records in their environment—through quantum Darwinism.


2012 ◽  
Vol 27 (01n03) ◽  
pp. 1345014 ◽  
Author(s):  
THOMAS DURT ◽  
VINCENT DEBIERRE

We consider the quasi-classical situation in which a quantum system interacts with another quantum system or with a quantum environment without getting entangled with it. We show how this regime is intimately linked to three paradigms commonly used in classical, pre-quantum physics to describe particles (that is, the material point, the test particle and the diluted particle (droplet model)). This entanglement-free regime also provides a simplified insight on what is called in the decoherence approach "islands of classicality", that is, preferred bases that would be selected through evolution by a Darwinist mechanism which aims at optimizing information. We show how, under very general conditions, coherent states are natural candidates for classical pointer states. This occurs essentially because, when a (supposedly bosonic) system coherently exchanges only one quantum at a time with its (supposedly bosonic) environment, coherent states of the system do not get entangled with the environment, due to the bosonic symmetry.


2008 ◽  
Vol 101 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Brunner ◽  
R. Akis ◽  
D. K. Ferry ◽  
F. Kuchar ◽  
R. Meisels

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