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Big Toy Models:
Representing Physical Systems As Chu Spaces
Samson Abramsky
Oxford University Computing Laboratory
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 1
Introduction
• Themes
• Chu Spaces
• Outline I
• Outline II
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics
One
Big Toy inModels
Introduction
Themes
Introduction
• Themes
• Chu Spaces
• Outline I
• Outline II
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics
One
Big Toy inModels
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 3
Themes
Introduction
• Themes
• Chu Spaces
• Outline I
• Outline II
Chu Spaces
• (Foundations of) Mathematical Physics, ‘but not as we know it, Jim’.
Exemplifies one of the main thrusts of our group in Oxford:
methods and concepts which have been developed in Theoretical
Computer Science are ripe for use in Physics.
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics
One
Big Toy inModels
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 3
Themes
Introduction
• Themes
• Chu Spaces
• Outline I
• Outline II
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
• (Foundations of) Mathematical Physics, ‘but not as we know it, Jim’.
Exemplifies one of the main thrusts of our group in Oxford:
methods and concepts which have been developed in Theoretical
Computer Science are ripe for use in Physics.
• Models vs. Axioms. Examples: sheaves and toposes,
domain-theoretic models of the λ-calculus.
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics
One
Big Toy inModels
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 3
Themes
Introduction
• Themes
• Chu Spaces
• Outline I
• Outline II
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
• (Foundations of) Mathematical Physics, ‘but not as we know it, Jim’.
Exemplifies one of the main thrusts of our group in Oxford:
methods and concepts which have been developed in Theoretical
Computer Science are ripe for use in Physics.
• Models vs. Axioms. Examples: sheaves and toposes,
domain-theoretic models of the λ-calculus.
• Toy Models. Rob Spekkens: ‘Evidence for the epistemic view of
quantum states: A toy theory’.
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics
One
Big Toy inModels
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 3
Themes
Introduction
• Themes
• Chu Spaces
• Outline I
• Outline II
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
• (Foundations of) Mathematical Physics, ‘but not as we know it, Jim’.
Exemplifies one of the main thrusts of our group in Oxford:
methods and concepts which have been developed in Theoretical
Computer Science are ripe for use in Physics.
• Models vs. Axioms. Examples: sheaves and toposes,
domain-theoretic models of the λ-calculus.
• Toy Models. Rob Spekkens: ‘Evidence for the epistemic view of
quantum states: A toy theory’.
• Big toy models.
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics
One
Big Toy inModels
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 3
Chu Spaces
Introduction
• Themes
• Chu Spaces
• Outline I
• Outline II
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics
One
Big Toy inModels
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 4
Chu Spaces
Introduction
• Themes
• Chu Spaces
• Outline I
• Outline II
Chu Spaces
We should understand Chu spaces as providing a very general (and, we
might reasonably say, rather simple) ‘logic of systems or structures’.
Indeed, they have been proposed by Barwise and Seligman as the
vehicle for a general logic of ‘distributed systems’ and information flow.
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics
One
Big Toy inModels
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 4
Chu Spaces
Introduction
• Themes
• Chu Spaces
• Outline I
• Outline II
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
We should understand Chu spaces as providing a very general (and, we
might reasonably say, rather simple) ‘logic of systems or structures’.
Indeed, they have been proposed by Barwise and Seligman as the
vehicle for a general logic of ‘distributed systems’ and information flow.
This logic of Chu spaces was in no way biassed in its conception towards
the description of quantum mechanics or any other kind of physical
system.
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics
One
Big Toy inModels
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 4
Chu Spaces
Introduction
• Themes
• Chu Spaces
• Outline I
• Outline II
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
We should understand Chu spaces as providing a very general (and, we
might reasonably say, rather simple) ‘logic of systems or structures’.
Indeed, they have been proposed by Barwise and Seligman as the
vehicle for a general logic of ‘distributed systems’ and information flow.
This logic of Chu spaces was in no way biassed in its conception towards
the description of quantum mechanics or any other kind of physical
system.
Just for this reason, it is interesting to see how much of
quantum-mechanical structure and concepts can be absorbed and
essentially determined by this more general systems logic.
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics
One
Big Toy inModels
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 4
Outline I
Introduction
• Themes
• Chu Spaces
• Outline I
• Outline II
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics
One
Big Toy inModels
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 5
Outline I
Introduction
• Themes
• Chu Spaces
• Outline I
• Outline II
• Chu spaces as a setting. We can find natural representations of
quantum (and other) systems as Chu spaces.
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics
One
Big Toy inModels
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 5
Outline I
Introduction
• Themes
• Chu Spaces
• Outline I
• Outline II
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
• Chu spaces as a setting. We can find natural representations of
quantum (and other) systems as Chu spaces.
• The general ‘logic’ of Chu spaces and morphisms allow us to
‘rationally reconstruct’ many key quantum notions:
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics
One
Big Toy inModels
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 5
Outline I
Introduction
• Themes
• Chu Spaces
• Outline I
• Outline II
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
• Chu spaces as a setting. We can find natural representations of
quantum (and other) systems as Chu spaces.
• The general ‘logic’ of Chu spaces and morphisms allow us to
‘rationally reconstruct’ many key quantum notions:
• States as rays of Hilbert spaces fall out as the biextensional
collapse of the Chu spaces.
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics
One
Big Toy inModels
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 5
Outline I
Introduction
• Themes
• Chu Spaces
• Outline I
• Outline II
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
• Chu spaces as a setting. We can find natural representations of
quantum (and other) systems as Chu spaces.
• The general ‘logic’ of Chu spaces and morphisms allow us to
‘rationally reconstruct’ many key quantum notions:
• States as rays of Hilbert spaces fall out as the biextensional
collapse of the Chu spaces.
• Chu morphisms are automatically the unitaries and
antiunitaries — the physical symmetries of quantum systems.
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics
One
Big Toy inModels
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 5
Outline I
Introduction
• Themes
• Chu Spaces
• Outline I
• Outline II
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
• Chu spaces as a setting. We can find natural representations of
quantum (and other) systems as Chu spaces.
• The general ‘logic’ of Chu spaces and morphisms allow us to
‘rationally reconstruct’ many key quantum notions:
• States as rays of Hilbert spaces fall out as the biextensional
collapse of the Chu spaces.
• Chu morphisms are automatically the unitaries and
antiunitaries — the physical symmetries of quantum systems.
• This leads to a full and faithful representation of the
groupoid of Hilbert spaces and their physical symmetries in
Chu spaces over the unit interval.
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics
One
Big Toy inModels
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 5
Outline II
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 6
Outline II
• This leads to a further question of conceptual interest: is this representation
preserved by collapsing the unit interval to finitely many values?
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 6
Outline II
• This leads to a further question of conceptual interest: is this representation
preserved by collapsing the unit interval to finitely many values?
• For the two canonical possibilistic collapses to two values, we show
that this fails.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 6
Outline II
• This leads to a further question of conceptual interest: is this representation
preserved by collapsing the unit interval to finitely many values?
• For the two canonical possibilistic collapses to two values, we show
that this fails.
• However, the natural collapse to three values works! — A possible rôle
for 3-valued logic in quantum foundations?
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 6
Outline II
• This leads to a further question of conceptual interest: is this representation
preserved by collapsing the unit interval to finitely many values?
• For the two canonical possibilistic collapses to two values, we show
that this fails.
• However, the natural collapse to three values works! — A possible rôle
for 3-valued logic in quantum foundations?
• We also look at coalgebras as a possible alternative setting to Chu spaces.
Some interesting and novel points arise in comparing and relating these two
well-studied systems models.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 6
Outline II
• This leads to a further question of conceptual interest: is this representation
preserved by collapsing the unit interval to finitely many values?
• For the two canonical possibilistic collapses to two values, we show
that this fails.
• However, the natural collapse to three values works! — A possible rôle
for 3-valued logic in quantum foundations?
• We also look at coalgebras as a possible alternative setting to Chu spaces.
Some interesting and novel points arise in comparing and relating these two
well-studied systems models.
There is a paper available as an Oxford University Computing Laboratory Research
Report: RR–09–08 at
http://www.comlab.ox.ac.uk/techreports/cs/2009.html
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 6
Introduction
Chu Spaces
• Chu Spaces
• Definitions
• Extensionality and
Separability
• Biextensional
Collapse
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Big Toy Models
Chu Spaces
Chu Spaces
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 8
Chu Spaces
History: Michael Barr’s 1979 monograph on ∗-Autonomous categories, appendix by
Po-Hsiang Chu. A generalization of constructions of dual pairings of topological
vector spaces from G. W. Mackey’s thesis.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 8
Chu Spaces
History: Michael Barr’s 1979 monograph on ∗-Autonomous categories, appendix by
Po-Hsiang Chu. A generalization of constructions of dual pairings of topological
vector spaces from G. W. Mackey’s thesis.
Chu spaces have several interesting aspects:
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 8
Chu Spaces
History: Michael Barr’s 1979 monograph on ∗-Autonomous categories, appendix by
Po-Hsiang Chu. A generalization of constructions of dual pairings of topological
vector spaces from G. W. Mackey’s thesis.
Chu spaces have several interesting aspects:
• They have a rich type structure, and in particular form models of Linear Logic
(Seely).
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 8
Chu Spaces
History: Michael Barr’s 1979 monograph on ∗-Autonomous categories, appendix by
Po-Hsiang Chu. A generalization of constructions of dual pairings of topological
vector spaces from G. W. Mackey’s thesis.
Chu spaces have several interesting aspects:
• They have a rich type structure, and in particular form models of Linear Logic
(Seely).
• They have a rich representation theory; many concrete categories of interest
can be fully embedded into Chu spaces (Lafont and Streicher, Pratt).
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 8
Chu Spaces
History: Michael Barr’s 1979 monograph on ∗-Autonomous categories, appendix by
Po-Hsiang Chu. A generalization of constructions of dual pairings of topological
vector spaces from G. W. Mackey’s thesis.
Chu spaces have several interesting aspects:
• They have a rich type structure, and in particular form models of Linear Logic
(Seely).
• They have a rich representation theory; many concrete categories of interest
can be fully embedded into Chu spaces (Lafont and Streicher, Pratt).
• There is a natural notion of ‘local logic’ on Chu spaces (Barwise), and an
interesting characterization of information transfer across Chu morphisms
(van Benthem).
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 8
Chu Spaces
History: Michael Barr’s 1979 monograph on ∗-Autonomous categories, appendix by
Po-Hsiang Chu. A generalization of constructions of dual pairings of topological
vector spaces from G. W. Mackey’s thesis.
Chu spaces have several interesting aspects:
• They have a rich type structure, and in particular form models of Linear Logic
(Seely).
• They have a rich representation theory; many concrete categories of interest
can be fully embedded into Chu spaces (Lafont and Streicher, Pratt).
• There is a natural notion of ‘local logic’ on Chu spaces (Barwise), and an
interesting characterization of information transfer across Chu morphisms
(van Benthem).
Applications of Chu spaces have been proposed in a number of areas, including
concurrency, hardware verification, game theory and fuzzy systems.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 8
Definitions
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 9
Definitions
Fix a set K . A Chu space over K is a structure (X, A, e), where X is a set of
‘points’ or ‘objects’, A is a set of ‘attributes’, and e : X × A → K is an evaluation
function.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 9
Definitions
Fix a set K . A Chu space over K is a structure (X, A, e), where X is a set of
‘points’ or ‘objects’, A is a set of ‘attributes’, and e : X × A → K is an evaluation
function.
A morphism of Chu spaces f : (X, A, e) → (X ′ , A′ , e′ ) is a pair of functions
f = (f∗ : X → X ′ , f ∗ : A′ → A)
such that, for all x ∈ X and a′ ∈ A′ :
e(x, f ∗ (a′ )) = e′ (f∗ (x), a′ ).
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 9
Definitions
Fix a set K . A Chu space over K is a structure (X, A, e), where X is a set of
‘points’ or ‘objects’, A is a set of ‘attributes’, and e : X × A → K is an evaluation
function.
A morphism of Chu spaces f : (X, A, e) → (X ′ , A′ , e′ ) is a pair of functions
f = (f∗ : X → X ′ , f ∗ : A′ → A)
such that, for all x ∈ X and a′ ∈ A′ :
e(x, f ∗ (a′ )) = e′ (f∗ (x), a′ ).
Chu morphisms compose componentwise: if f : (X1 , A1 , e1 ) → (X2 , A2 , e2 ) and
g : (X2 , A2 , e2 ) → (X3 , A3 , e3 ), then
(g ◦ f )∗ = g∗ ◦ f∗ ,
Big Toy Models
(g ◦ f )∗ = f ∗ ◦ g ∗ .
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 9
Definitions
Fix a set K . A Chu space over K is a structure (X, A, e), where X is a set of
‘points’ or ‘objects’, A is a set of ‘attributes’, and e : X × A → K is an evaluation
function.
A morphism of Chu spaces f : (X, A, e) → (X ′ , A′ , e′ ) is a pair of functions
f = (f∗ : X → X ′ , f ∗ : A′ → A)
such that, for all x ∈ X and a′ ∈ A′ :
e(x, f ∗ (a′ )) = e′ (f∗ (x), a′ ).
Chu morphisms compose componentwise: if f : (X1 , A1 , e1 ) → (X2 , A2 , e2 ) and
g : (X2 , A2 , e2 ) → (X3 , A3 , e3 ), then
(g ◦ f )∗ = g∗ ◦ f∗ ,
(g ◦ f )∗ = f ∗ ◦ g ∗ .
Chu spaces over K and their morphisms form a category ChuK .
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 9
Extensionality and Separability
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 10
Extensionality and Separability
Given a Chu space C = (X, A, e), we say that C is:
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 10
Extensionality and Separability
Given a Chu space C = (X, A, e), we say that C is:
• extensional if for all a1 , a2 ∈ A:
[∀x ∈ X. e(x, a1 ) = e(x, a2 )] ⇒ a1 = a2
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 10
Extensionality and Separability
Given a Chu space C = (X, A, e), we say that C is:
• extensional if for all a1 , a2 ∈ A:
[∀x ∈ X. e(x, a1 ) = e(x, a2 )] ⇒ a1 = a2
• separable if for all x1 , x2 ∈ X :
[∀a ∈ A. e(x1 , a) = e(x2 , a)] ⇒ x1 = x2
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 10
Extensionality and Separability
Given a Chu space C = (X, A, e), we say that C is:
• extensional if for all a1 , a2 ∈ A:
[∀x ∈ X. e(x, a1 ) = e(x, a2 )] ⇒ a1 = a2
• separable if for all x1 , x2 ∈ X :
[∀a ∈ A. e(x1 , a) = e(x2 , a)] ⇒ x1 = x2
• biextensional if it is extensional and separable.
We define an equivalence relation on X by:
x1 ∼ x2 ⇐⇒ ∀a ∈ A. e(x1 , a) = e(x2 , a).
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 10
Extensionality and Separability
Given a Chu space C = (X, A, e), we say that C is:
• extensional if for all a1 , a2 ∈ A:
[∀x ∈ X. e(x, a1 ) = e(x, a2 )] ⇒ a1 = a2
• separable if for all x1 , x2 ∈ X :
[∀a ∈ A. e(x1 , a) = e(x2 , a)] ⇒ x1 = x2
• biextensional if it is extensional and separable.
We define an equivalence relation on X by:
x1 ∼ x2 ⇐⇒ ∀a ∈ A. e(x1 , a) = e(x2 , a).
C is separable exactly when this relation is the identity. There is a Chu morphism
(q, idA ) : (X, A, e) → (X/∼, A, e′ )
where e′ ([x], a) = e(x, a) and q : X → X/∼ is the quotient map.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 10
Biextensional Collapse
Introduction
Chu Spaces
• Chu Spaces
• Definitions
• Extensionality and
Separability
• Biextensional
Collapse
Proposition 1 If f : (X, A, e) → (X ′ , A′ , e′ ) is a Chu morphism, then
f∗ preserves ∼. That is, for all x1 , x2 ∈ X ,
x1 ∼ x2 ⇒ f∗ (x1 ) ∼ f∗ (x2 ).
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 11
Biextensional Collapse
Introduction
Chu Spaces
• Chu Spaces
• Definitions
• Extensionality and
Proposition 1 If f : (X, A, e) → (X ′ , A′ , e′ ) is a Chu morphism, then
f∗ preserves ∼. That is, for all x1 , x2 ∈ X ,
x1 ∼ x2 ⇒ f∗ (x1 ) ∼ f∗ (x2 ).
Separability
• Biextensional
Collapse
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Proof
For any a′ ∈ A′ :
e′ (f∗ (x1 ), a′ ) = e(x1 , f ∗ (a′ )) = e(x2 , f ∗ (a′ )) = e′ (f∗ (x2 ), a′ ).
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 11
Biextensional Collapse
Introduction
Chu Spaces
• Chu Spaces
• Definitions
• Extensionality and
Proposition 1 If f : (X, A, e) → (X ′ , A′ , e′ ) is a Chu morphism, then
f∗ preserves ∼. That is, for all x1 , x2 ∈ X ,
x1 ∼ x2 ⇒ f∗ (x1 ) ∼ f∗ (x2 ).
Separability
• Biextensional
Collapse
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Proof
For any a′ ∈ A′ :
e′ (f∗ (x1 ), a′ ) = e(x1 , f ∗ (a′ )) = e(x2 , f ∗ (a′ )) = e′ (f∗ (x2 ), a′ ).
We shall write eChuK , sChuK and bChuK for the full subcategories
of ChuK determined by the extensional, separated and biextensional
Chu spaces.
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 11
Biextensional Collapse
Introduction
Chu Spaces
• Chu Spaces
• Definitions
• Extensionality and
Proposition 1 If f : (X, A, e) → (X ′ , A′ , e′ ) is a Chu morphism, then
f∗ preserves ∼. That is, for all x1 , x2 ∈ X ,
x1 ∼ x2 ⇒ f∗ (x1 ) ∼ f∗ (x2 ).
Separability
• Biextensional
Collapse
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
Proof
For any a′ ∈ A′ :
e′ (f∗ (x1 ), a′ ) = e(x1 , f ∗ (a′ )) = e(x2 , f ∗ (a′ )) = e′ (f∗ (x2 ), a′ ).
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Big Toy Models
We shall write eChuK , sChuK and bChuK for the full subcategories
of ChuK determined by the extensional, separated and biextensional
Chu spaces.
We shall mainly work with extensional and biextensional Chu spaces.
Obviously bChuK is a full sub-category of eChuK .
Proposition 2 The inclusion bChuK
Q, the biextensional collapse..
⊂
- eChuK has a left adjoint
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 11
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
• The General
Paradigm
• Representing
Quantum Systems As
Chu Spaces
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Big Toy inModels
Semantics
One
Representing Physical Systems
The General Paradigm
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 13
The General Paradigm
We take a system to be specified by its set of states S , and the set of questions Q
which can be ‘asked’ of the system.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 13
The General Paradigm
We take a system to be specified by its set of states S , and the set of questions Q
which can be ‘asked’ of the system.
We shall consider only ‘yes/no’ questions; however, the result of asking a question in
a given state will in general be probabilistic. This will be represented by an
evaluation function
e : S × Q → [0, 1]
where e(s, q) is the probability that the question q will receive the answer ‘yes’ when
the system is in state s.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 13
The General Paradigm
We take a system to be specified by its set of states S , and the set of questions Q
which can be ‘asked’ of the system.
We shall consider only ‘yes/no’ questions; however, the result of asking a question in
a given state will in general be probabilistic. This will be represented by an
evaluation function
e : S × Q → [0, 1]
where e(s, q) is the probability that the question q will receive the answer ‘yes’ when
the system is in state s.
This is a Chu space!
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 13
The General Paradigm
We take a system to be specified by its set of states S , and the set of questions Q
which can be ‘asked’ of the system.
We shall consider only ‘yes/no’ questions; however, the result of asking a question in
a given state will in general be probabilistic. This will be represented by an
evaluation function
e : S × Q → [0, 1]
where e(s, q) is the probability that the question q will receive the answer ‘yes’ when
the system is in state s.
This is a Chu space!
N.B. This is essentially the point of view taken by Mackey in his classic
‘Mathematical foundations of Quantum Mechanics’. Note that we prefer ‘question’ to
‘property’, since QM we cannot think in terms of static properties which are
determinately possessed by a given state; questions imply a dynamic act of asking.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 13
The General Paradigm
We take a system to be specified by its set of states S , and the set of questions Q
which can be ‘asked’ of the system.
We shall consider only ‘yes/no’ questions; however, the result of asking a question in
a given state will in general be probabilistic. This will be represented by an
evaluation function
e : S × Q → [0, 1]
where e(s, q) is the probability that the question q will receive the answer ‘yes’ when
the system is in state s.
This is a Chu space!
N.B. This is essentially the point of view taken by Mackey in his classic
‘Mathematical foundations of Quantum Mechanics’. Note that we prefer ‘question’ to
‘property’, since QM we cannot think in terms of static properties which are
determinately possessed by a given state; questions imply a dynamic act of asking.
It is standard in the foundational literature on QM to focus on yes/no questions.
However, the usual approaches to quantum logic avoid the direct introduction of
probabilities. More on this later!
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 13
Representing Quantum Systems As Chu Spaces
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
• The General
Paradigm
• Representing
Quantum Systems As
Chu Spaces
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Big Toy inModels
Semantics
One
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 14
Representing Quantum Systems As Chu Spaces
Introduction
A quantum system with a Hilbert space H as its state space will be
represented as
(H◦ , L(H), eH )
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
• The General
Paradigm
• Representing
Quantum Systems As
Chu Spaces
where
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Big Toy inModels
Semantics
One
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 14
Representing Quantum Systems As Chu Spaces
Introduction
A quantum system with a Hilbert space H as its state space will be
represented as
(H◦ , L(H), eH )
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
• The General
Paradigm
• Representing
Quantum Systems As
Chu Spaces
where
• H◦ is the set of non-zero vectors of H
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Big Toy inModels
Semantics
One
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 14
Representing Quantum Systems As Chu Spaces
Introduction
A quantum system with a Hilbert space H as its state space will be
represented as
(H◦ , L(H), eH )
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
• The General
Paradigm
• Representing
Quantum Systems As
Chu Spaces
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
where
• H◦ is the set of non-zero vectors of H
• L(H) is the set of closed subspaces of H — the ‘yes/no’ questions
of QM
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Big Toy inModels
Semantics
One
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 14
Representing Quantum Systems As Chu Spaces
Introduction
A quantum system with a Hilbert space H as its state space will be
represented as
(H◦ , L(H), eH )
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
• The General
Paradigm
• Representing
Quantum Systems As
Chu Spaces
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
where
• H◦ is the set of non-zero vectors of H
• L(H) is the set of closed subspaces of H — the ‘yes/no’ questions
of QM
• The evaluation function eH is the ‘statistical algorithm’ giving the
basic predictive content of Quantum Mechanics:
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
hPS ψ | PS ψi
kPS ψk2
hψ | PS ψi
=
=
.
eH (ψ, S) =
2
hψ | ψi
hψ | ψi
kψk
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Big Toy inModels
Semantics
One
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 14
Representing Quantum Systems As Chu Spaces
Introduction
A quantum system with a Hilbert space H as its state space will be
represented as
(H◦ , L(H), eH )
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
• The General
Paradigm
• Representing
Quantum Systems As
Chu Spaces
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
where
• H◦ is the set of non-zero vectors of H
• L(H) is the set of closed subspaces of H — the ‘yes/no’ questions
of QM
• The evaluation function eH is the ‘statistical algorithm’ giving the
basic predictive content of Quantum Mechanics:
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
hPS ψ | PS ψi
kPS ψk2
hψ | PS ψi
=
=
.
eH (ψ, S) =
2
hψ | ψi
hψ | ψi
kψk
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Big Toy inModels
Semantics
One
We have thus directly transcribed the basic ingredients of the Dirac/von
Neumann-style formulation of Quantum Mechanics into the definition of
this Chu space.
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 14
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
• Overview
• Biextensionaity
• Projectivity =
Biextensionality
• Characterizing Chu
Morphisms
• Injectivity
Assumption
• Orthogonality is
Preserved
• Constructing the Left
Adjoint
• Using Projective
Duality
• Wigner’s Theorem
• Remarks
• A Surprise:
Surjectivity Comes for
Free!
• Putting The Pieces
Together
The Representation
Theorem
Big ToyThe
Models
Reducing
Value
Characterizing Chu Morphisms
on Quantum Chu Spaces
Overview
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
• Overview
• Biextensionaity
• Projectivity =
Biextensionality
• Characterizing Chu
Morphisms
• Injectivity
Assumption
• Orthogonality is
Preserved
• Constructing the Left
Adjoint
• Using Projective
Duality
• Wigner’s Theorem
• Remarks
• A Surprise:
Surjectivity Comes for
Free!
• Putting The Pieces
Together
The Representation
Theorem
Big ToyThe
Models
Reducing
Value
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 16
Overview
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
• Overview
• Biextensionaity
• Projectivity =
We shall now see how the simple, discrete notions of Chu spaces suffice
to determine the appropriate notions of state equivalence, and to pick out
the physically significant symmetries on Hilbert space in a very striking
fashion. This leads to a full and faithful representation of the category of
quantum systems, with the groupoid structure of their physical
symmetries, in the category of Chu spaces valued in the unit interval.
Biextensionality
• Characterizing Chu
Morphisms
• Injectivity
Assumption
• Orthogonality is
Preserved
• Constructing the Left
Adjoint
• Using Projective
Duality
• Wigner’s Theorem
• Remarks
• A Surprise:
Surjectivity Comes for
Free!
• Putting The Pieces
Together
The Representation
Theorem
Big ToyThe
Models
Reducing
Value
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 16
Overview
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
• Overview
• Biextensionaity
• Projectivity =
Biextensionality
• Characterizing Chu
Morphisms
• Injectivity
Assumption
• Orthogonality is
Preserved
• Constructing the Left
Adjoint
• Using Projective
Duality
We shall now see how the simple, discrete notions of Chu spaces suffice
to determine the appropriate notions of state equivalence, and to pick out
the physically significant symmetries on Hilbert space in a very striking
fashion. This leads to a full and faithful representation of the category of
quantum systems, with the groupoid structure of their physical
symmetries, in the category of Chu spaces valued in the unit interval.
The arguments here make use of Wigner’s theorem and the dualities of
projective geometry, in the modern form developed by Faure and
Frölicher, Modern Projective Geometry (2000).
• Wigner’s Theorem
• Remarks
• A Surprise:
Surjectivity Comes for
Free!
• Putting The Pieces
Together
The Representation
Theorem
Big ToyThe
Models
Reducing
Value
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 16
Overview
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
• Overview
• Biextensionaity
• Projectivity =
Biextensionality
• Characterizing Chu
Morphisms
• Injectivity
Assumption
• Orthogonality is
Preserved
• Constructing the Left
Adjoint
• Using Projective
Duality
• Wigner’s Theorem
• Remarks
• A Surprise:
We shall now see how the simple, discrete notions of Chu spaces suffice
to determine the appropriate notions of state equivalence, and to pick out
the physically significant symmetries on Hilbert space in a very striking
fashion. This leads to a full and faithful representation of the category of
quantum systems, with the groupoid structure of their physical
symmetries, in the category of Chu spaces valued in the unit interval.
The arguments here make use of Wigner’s theorem and the dualities of
projective geometry, in the modern form developed by Faure and
Frölicher, Modern Projective Geometry (2000).
The surprising point is that unitarity/anitunitarity is essentially forced by
the mere requirement of being a Chu morphism. This even extends to
surjectivity, which here is derived rather than assumed.
Surjectivity Comes for
Free!
• Putting The Pieces
Together
The Representation
Theorem
Big ToyThe
Models
Reducing
Value
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 16
Biextensionaity
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
• Overview
• Biextensionaity
• Projectivity =
Biextensionality
• Characterizing Chu
Morphisms
• Injectivity
Assumption
• Orthogonality is
Preserved
• Constructing the Left
Adjoint
• Using Projective
Duality
• Wigner’s Theorem
• Remarks
• A Surprise:
Surjectivity Comes for
Free!
• Putting The Pieces
Together
The Representation
Theorem
Big ToyThe
Models
Reducing
Value
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 17
Biextensionaity
Introduction
Given a Hilbert space H, consider the Chu space (H◦ , L(H), eH ).
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
• Overview
• Biextensionaity
• Projectivity =
Biextensionality
• Characterizing Chu
Morphisms
• Injectivity
Assumption
• Orthogonality is
Preserved
• Constructing the Left
Adjoint
• Using Projective
Duality
• Wigner’s Theorem
• Remarks
• A Surprise:
Surjectivity Comes for
Free!
• Putting The Pieces
Together
The Representation
Theorem
Big ToyThe
Models
Reducing
Value
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 17
Biextensionaity
Introduction
Given a Hilbert space H, consider the Chu space (H◦ , L(H), eH ).
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
• Overview
• Biextensionaity
• Projectivity =
A basic property of the evaluation.
Lemma 3
For ψ ∈ H◦ and S ∈ L(H):
ψ ∈ S ⇐⇒ eH (ψ, S) = 1.
Biextensionality
• Characterizing Chu
Morphisms
• Injectivity
Assumption
• Orthogonality is
Preserved
• Constructing the Left
Adjoint
• Using Projective
Duality
• Wigner’s Theorem
• Remarks
• A Surprise:
Surjectivity Comes for
Free!
• Putting The Pieces
Together
The Representation
Theorem
Big ToyThe
Models
Reducing
Value
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 17
Biextensionaity
Introduction
Given a Hilbert space H, consider the Chu space (H◦ , L(H), eH ).
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
• Overview
• Biextensionaity
• Projectivity =
Biextensionality
• Characterizing Chu
Morphisms
• Injectivity
Assumption
• Orthogonality is
Preserved
• Constructing the Left
Adjoint
• Using Projective
Duality
• Wigner’s Theorem
• Remarks
• A Surprise:
A basic property of the evaluation.
Lemma 3
For ψ ∈ H◦ and S ∈ L(H):
ψ ∈ S ⇐⇒ eH (ψ, S) = 1.
From this, we can prove:
Proposition 4 The Chu space (H◦ , L(H), eH ) is extensional but not
separable. The equivalence classes of the relation ∼ on states are
exactly the rays of H. That is:
φ ∼ ψ ⇐⇒ ∃λ ∈ C. φ = λψ.
Surjectivity Comes for
Free!
• Putting The Pieces
Together
The Representation
Theorem
Big ToyThe
Models
Reducing
Value
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 17
Biextensionaity
Introduction
Given a Hilbert space H, consider the Chu space (H◦ , L(H), eH ).
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
• Overview
• Biextensionaity
• Projectivity =
Biextensionality
• Characterizing Chu
Morphisms
• Injectivity
Assumption
• Orthogonality is
Preserved
• Constructing the Left
Adjoint
• Using Projective
Duality
• Wigner’s Theorem
• Remarks
• A Surprise:
Surjectivity Comes for
Free!
• Putting The Pieces
Together
The Representation
Theorem
Big ToyThe
Models
Reducing
Value
A basic property of the evaluation.
Lemma 3
For ψ ∈ H◦ and S ∈ L(H):
ψ ∈ S ⇐⇒ eH (ψ, S) = 1.
From this, we can prove:
Proposition 4 The Chu space (H◦ , L(H), eH ) is extensional but not
separable. The equivalence classes of the relation ∼ on states are
exactly the rays of H. That is:
φ ∼ ψ ⇐⇒ ∃λ ∈ C. φ = λψ.
Thus we have recovered the standard notion of pure states as the rays of
the Hilbert space from the general notion of state equivalence in Chu
spaces.
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 17
Projectivity = Biextensionality
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
• Overview
• Biextensionaity
• Projectivity =
Biextensionality
• Characterizing Chu
Morphisms
• Injectivity
Assumption
• Orthogonality is
Preserved
• Constructing the Left
Adjoint
• Using Projective
Duality
• Wigner’s Theorem
• Remarks
• A Surprise:
Surjectivity Comes for
Free!
• Putting The Pieces
Together
The Representation
Theorem
Big ToyThe
Models
Reducing
Value
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 18
Projectivity = Biextensionality
Introduction
We shall now use some notions and results from projective geometry.
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
• Overview
• Biextensionaity
• Projectivity =
Biextensionality
• Characterizing Chu
Morphisms
• Injectivity
Assumption
• Orthogonality is
Preserved
• Constructing the Left
Adjoint
• Using Projective
Duality
• Wigner’s Theorem
• Remarks
• A Surprise:
Surjectivity Comes for
Free!
• Putting The Pieces
Together
The Representation
Theorem
Big ToyThe
Models
Reducing
Value
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 18
Projectivity = Biextensionality
Introduction
We shall now use some notions and results from projective geometry.
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
Given a vector ψ ∈ H◦ , we write ψ̄ = {λψ | λ ∈ C} for the ray which it
generates. The rays are the atoms in the lattice L(H).
• Overview
• Biextensionaity
• Projectivity =
Biextensionality
• Characterizing Chu
Morphisms
• Injectivity
Assumption
• Orthogonality is
Preserved
• Constructing the Left
Adjoint
• Using Projective
Duality
• Wigner’s Theorem
• Remarks
• A Surprise:
Surjectivity Comes for
Free!
• Putting The Pieces
Together
The Representation
Theorem
Big ToyThe
Models
Reducing
Value
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 18
Projectivity = Biextensionality
Introduction
We shall now use some notions and results from projective geometry.
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
• Overview
• Biextensionaity
• Projectivity =
Biextensionality
• Characterizing Chu
Morphisms
• Injectivity
Assumption
• Orthogonality is
Preserved
• Constructing the Left
Adjoint
• Using Projective
Duality
Given a vector ψ ∈ H◦ , we write ψ̄ = {λψ | λ ∈ C} for the ray which it
generates. The rays are the atoms in the lattice L(H).
We write P(H) for the set of rays of H. By virtue of Proposition 4, we can
write the biextensional collapse of (H◦ , L(H), eH ) given by Proposition 2
as
(P(H), L(H), ēH)
where ēH (ψ̄, S) = eH (ψ, S).
• Wigner’s Theorem
• Remarks
• A Surprise:
Surjectivity Comes for
Free!
• Putting The Pieces
Together
The Representation
Theorem
Big ToyThe
Models
Reducing
Value
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 18
Projectivity = Biextensionality
Introduction
We shall now use some notions and results from projective geometry.
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
• Overview
• Biextensionaity
• Projectivity =
Biextensionality
• Characterizing Chu
Morphisms
• Injectivity
Assumption
• Orthogonality is
Preserved
• Constructing the Left
Adjoint
• Using Projective
Duality
• Wigner’s Theorem
• Remarks
• A Surprise:
Surjectivity Comes for
Free!
• Putting The Pieces
Together
Given a vector ψ ∈ H◦ , we write ψ̄ = {λψ | λ ∈ C} for the ray which it
generates. The rays are the atoms in the lattice L(H).
We write P(H) for the set of rays of H. By virtue of Proposition 4, we can
write the biextensional collapse of (H◦ , L(H), eH ) given by Proposition 2
as
(P(H), L(H), ēH)
where ēH (ψ̄, S) = eH (ψ, S).
We restate Lemma 3 for the biextensional case.
Lemma 5
For ψ ∈ H◦ and S ∈ L(H):
ēH (ψ̄, S) = 1 ⇐⇒ ψ̄ ⊆ S.
The Representation
Theorem
Big ToyThe
Models
Reducing
Value
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 18
Characterizing Chu Morphisms
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 19
Characterizing Chu Morphisms
To fix notation, suppose we have Hilbert spaces H and K, and a Chu morphism
(f∗ , f ∗ ) : (P(H), L(H), ēH) → (P(K), L(K), ēK ).
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 19
Characterizing Chu Morphisms
To fix notation, suppose we have Hilbert spaces H and K, and a Chu morphism
(f∗ , f ∗ ) : (P(H), L(H), ēH) → (P(K), L(K), ēK ).
Proposition 6
For ψ ∈ H◦ and S ∈ L(K):
ψ̄ ⊆ f ∗ (S) ⇐⇒ f∗ (ψ̄) ⊆ S.
Proof
By Lemma 5:
ψ̄ ⊆ f ∗ (S) ⇔ ēH (ψ̄, f ∗ (S)) = 1 ⇔ ēK (f∗ (ψ̄), S) = 1 ⇔ f∗ (ψ̄) ⊆ S.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 19
Characterizing Chu Morphisms
To fix notation, suppose we have Hilbert spaces H and K, and a Chu morphism
(f∗ , f ∗ ) : (P(H), L(H), ēH) → (P(K), L(K), ēK ).
Proposition 6
For ψ ∈ H◦ and S ∈ L(K):
ψ̄ ⊆ f ∗ (S) ⇐⇒ f∗ (ψ̄) ⊆ S.
Proof
By Lemma 5:
ψ̄ ⊆ f ∗ (S) ⇔ ēH (ψ̄, f ∗ (S)) = 1 ⇔ ēK (f∗ (ψ̄), S) = 1 ⇔ f∗ (ψ̄) ⊆ S.
Note that P(H) ⊆ L(H).
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 19
Injectivity Assumption
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 20
Injectivity Assumption
Proposition 7
If f∗ is injective, then the following diagram commutes:
P(H)
f∗-
∩
P(K)
∩
(1)
?
L(H) ∗
f
?
L(K)
That is, for all ψ ∈ H◦ :
ψ̄ = f ∗ (f∗ (ψ̄)).
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 20
Injectivity Assumption
Proposition 7
If f∗ is injective, then the following diagram commutes:
P(H)
f∗-
∩
P(K)
∩
(1)
?
L(H) ∗
f
?
L(K)
That is, for all ψ ∈ H◦ :
ψ̄ = f ∗ (f∗ (ψ̄)).
Proposition 6 implies that ψ̄ ⊆ f ∗ (f∗ (ψ̄)). For the converse, suppose that
φ̄ ⊆ f ∗ (f∗ (ψ̄)). Applying Proposition 6 again, this implies that f∗ (φ̄) ⊆ f∗ (ψ̄).
Since f∗ (φ̄) and f∗ (ψ̄) are atoms, this implies that f∗ (φ̄) = f∗ (ψ̄), which since f∗
is injective implies that φ̄ = ψ̄ . Thus the only atom below f ∗ (f∗ (ψ̄)) is ψ̄ . Since
L(H) is atomistic, this implies that f ∗ (f∗ (ψ̄)) ⊆ ψ̄ .
Proof
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 20
Orthogonality is Preserved
Another basic property of the evaluation.
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
Lemma 8
For any φ, ψ ∈ H◦ :
ēH (φ̄, ψ̄) = 0 ⇐⇒ φ ⊥ ψ.
• Overview
• Biextensionaity
• Projectivity =
Biextensionality
• Characterizing Chu
Morphisms
• Injectivity
Assumption
• Orthogonality is
Preserved
• Constructing the Left
Adjoint
• Using Projective
Duality
• Wigner’s Theorem
• Remarks
• A Surprise:
Surjectivity Comes for
Free!
• Putting The Pieces
Together
The Representation
Theorem
Big ToyThe
Models
Reducing
Value
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 21
Orthogonality is Preserved
Another basic property of the evaluation.
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
• Overview
• Biextensionaity
• Projectivity =
Biextensionality
• Characterizing Chu
Morphisms
• Injectivity
Assumption
• Orthogonality is
Preserved
• Constructing the Left
Adjoint
• Using Projective
Duality
Lemma 8
For any φ, ψ ∈ H◦ :
ēH (φ̄, ψ̄) = 0 ⇐⇒ φ ⊥ ψ.
Proposition 9 If f∗ is injective, it preserves and reflects
orthogonality. That is, for all φ, ψ ∈ H◦ :
φ ⊥ ψ ⇐⇒ f∗ (φ̄) ⊥ f∗ (ψ̄).
• Wigner’s Theorem
• Remarks
• A Surprise:
Surjectivity Comes for
Free!
• Putting The Pieces
Together
The Representation
Theorem
Big ToyThe
Models
Reducing
Value
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 21
Orthogonality is Preserved
Another basic property of the evaluation.
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Lemma 8
Representing Physical
Systems
ēH (φ̄, ψ̄) = 0 ⇐⇒ φ ⊥ ψ.
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
• Overview
• Biextensionaity
• Projectivity =
Biextensionality
• Characterizing Chu
Morphisms
• Injectivity
Assumption
• Orthogonality is
Preserved
• Constructing the Left
Adjoint
• Using Projective
Duality
• Wigner’s Theorem
• Remarks
• A Surprise:
For any φ, ψ ∈ H◦ :
Proposition 9 If f∗ is injective, it preserves and reflects
orthogonality. That is, for all φ, ψ ∈ H◦ :
φ ⊥ ψ ⇐⇒ f∗ (φ̄) ⊥ f∗ (ψ̄).
Proof
φ ⊥ ψ ⇐⇒ ēH (φ̄, ψ̄) = 0
Lemma 8
⇐⇒ ēH (φ̄, f ∗ (f∗ (ψ̄))) = 0 Proposition 7
Surjectivity Comes for
Free!
• Putting The Pieces
Together
⇐⇒ ēK (f∗ (φ̄), f∗ (ψ̄)) = 0
The Representation
Theorem
⇐⇒ f∗ (φ̄) ⊥ f∗ (ψ̄)
Big ToyThe
Models
Reducing
Value
Lemma 8.
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 21
Constructing the Left Adjoint
Introduction
We define a map f → : L(H) → L(K):
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
→
f (S) =
_
{f∗ (ψ̄) | ψ ∈ S◦ }
where S◦ = S \ {0}.
• Overview
• Biextensionaity
• Projectivity =
Biextensionality
• Characterizing Chu
Morphisms
• Injectivity
Assumption
• Orthogonality is
Preserved
• Constructing the Left
Adjoint
• Using Projective
Duality
• Wigner’s Theorem
• Remarks
• A Surprise:
Surjectivity Comes for
Free!
• Putting The Pieces
Together
The Representation
Theorem
Big ToyThe
Models
Reducing
Value
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 22
Constructing the Left Adjoint
Introduction
We define a map f → : L(H) → L(K):
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
• Overview
• Biextensionaity
• Projectivity =
Biextensionality
• Characterizing Chu
Morphisms
• Injectivity
Assumption
• Orthogonality is
Preserved
• Constructing the Left
Adjoint
• Using Projective
Duality
→
f (S) =
_
{f∗ (ψ̄) | ψ ∈ S◦ }
where S◦ = S \ {0}.
Lemma 10 The map f → is left adjoint to f ∗ :
f → (S) ⊆ T ⇐⇒ S ⊆ f ∗ (T ).
• Wigner’s Theorem
• Remarks
• A Surprise:
Surjectivity Comes for
Free!
• Putting The Pieces
Together
The Representation
Theorem
Big ToyThe
Models
Reducing
Value
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 22
Constructing the Left Adjoint
Introduction
We define a map f → : L(H) → L(K):
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
• Overview
• Biextensionaity
• Projectivity =
Biextensionality
• Characterizing Chu
Morphisms
• Injectivity
Assumption
• Orthogonality is
Preserved
• Constructing the Left
Adjoint
• Using Projective
Duality
• Wigner’s Theorem
• Remarks
• A Surprise:
Surjectivity Comes for
Free!
• Putting The Pieces
Together
The Representation
Theorem
Big ToyThe
Models
Reducing
Value
→
f (S) =
_
{f∗ (ψ̄) | ψ ∈ S◦ }
where S◦ = S \ {0}.
Lemma 10 The map f → is left adjoint to f ∗ :
f → (S) ⊆ T ⇐⇒ S ⊆ f ∗ (T ).
We can now extend the diagram (1):
P(H)
∩
f∗-
P(K)
∩
(2)
f →- ?
L(H) ⊥ L(K)
f∗
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 22
?
Using Projective Duality
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 23
Using Projective Duality
By construction, f → extends f∗ : this says that f → preserves atoms. Since f → is a
left adjoint, it preserves sups. Hence f → and f∗ are paired under the duality of
projective lattices and projective geometries.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 23
Using Projective Duality
By construction, f → extends f∗ : this says that f → preserves atoms. Since f → is a
left adjoint, it preserves sups. Hence f → and f∗ are paired under the duality of
projective lattices and projective geometries.
Proposition 11
Big Toy Models
f∗ is a total map of projective geometries.
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 23
Using Projective Duality
By construction, f → extends f∗ : this says that f → preserves atoms. Since f → is a
left adjoint, it preserves sups. Hence f → and f∗ are paired under the duality of
projective lattices and projective geometries.
Proposition 11
f∗ is a total map of projective geometries.
We can now apply Wigner’s Theorem, in the modernized form given by Faure
(2002).
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 23
Using Projective Duality
By construction, f → extends f∗ : this says that f → preserves atoms. Since f → is a
left adjoint, it preserves sups. Hence f → and f∗ are paired under the duality of
projective lattices and projective geometries.
Proposition 11
f∗ is a total map of projective geometries.
We can now apply Wigner’s Theorem, in the modernized form given by Faure
(2002).
Let V1 be a vector space over the field F and V2 a vector space over the field G. A
semilinear map from V1 to V2 is a pair (f, α) where α : F → G is a field
homomorphism, and f : V1 → V2 is an additive map such that, for all λ ∈ F and
v ∈ V1 :
f (λv) = α(λ)f (v).
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 23
Using Projective Duality
By construction, f → extends f∗ : this says that f → preserves atoms. Since f → is a
left adjoint, it preserves sups. Hence f → and f∗ are paired under the duality of
projective lattices and projective geometries.
Proposition 11
f∗ is a total map of projective geometries.
We can now apply Wigner’s Theorem, in the modernized form given by Faure
(2002).
Let V1 be a vector space over the field F and V2 a vector space over the field G. A
semilinear map from V1 to V2 is a pair (f, α) where α : F → G is a field
homomorphism, and f : V1 → V2 is an additive map such that, for all λ ∈ F and
v ∈ V1 :
f (λv) = α(λ)f (v).
Note that semilinear maps compose: if (f, α) : V1 → V2 and (g, β) : V2 → V3 ,
then (g ◦ f, β ◦ α) : V1 → V2 is a semilinear map.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 23
Using Projective Duality
By construction, f → extends f∗ : this says that f → preserves atoms. Since f → is a
left adjoint, it preserves sups. Hence f → and f∗ are paired under the duality of
projective lattices and projective geometries.
Proposition 11
f∗ is a total map of projective geometries.
We can now apply Wigner’s Theorem, in the modernized form given by Faure
(2002).
Let V1 be a vector space over the field F and V2 a vector space over the field G. A
semilinear map from V1 to V2 is a pair (f, α) where α : F → G is a field
homomorphism, and f : V1 → V2 is an additive map such that, for all λ ∈ F and
v ∈ V1 :
f (λv) = α(λ)f (v).
Note that semilinear maps compose: if (f, α) : V1 → V2 and (g, β) : V2 → V3 ,
then (g ◦ f, β ◦ α) : V1 → V2 is a semilinear map.
N.B. There are lots of (horrible) automorphisms, and non-surjective
endomorphisms, of the complex field!
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 23
Wigner’s Theorem
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
• Overview
• Biextensionaity
• Projectivity =
Biextensionality
• Characterizing Chu
Morphisms
• Injectivity
Assumption
• Orthogonality is
Preserved
• Constructing the Left
Adjoint
• Using Projective
Duality
• Wigner’s Theorem
• Remarks
• A Surprise:
Surjectivity Comes for
Free!
• Putting The Pieces
Together
The Representation
Theorem
Big ToyThe
Models
Reducing
Value
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 24
Wigner’s Theorem
Introduction
Given a semilinear map g : V1 → V2 , we define Pg : PV1 → PV2 by
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
P(g)(ψ̄) = g(ψ).
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
• Overview
• Biextensionaity
• Projectivity =
Biextensionality
• Characterizing Chu
Morphisms
• Injectivity
Assumption
• Orthogonality is
Preserved
• Constructing the Left
Adjoint
• Using Projective
Duality
• Wigner’s Theorem
• Remarks
• A Surprise:
Surjectivity Comes for
Free!
• Putting The Pieces
Together
The Representation
Theorem
Big ToyThe
Models
Reducing
Value
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 24
Wigner’s Theorem
Introduction
Given a semilinear map g : V1 → V2 , we define Pg : PV1 → PV2 by
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
• Overview
• Biextensionaity
• Projectivity =
Biextensionality
• Characterizing Chu
Morphisms
• Injectivity
Assumption
• Orthogonality is
Preserved
• Constructing the Left
Adjoint
• Using Projective
Duality
• Wigner’s Theorem
• Remarks
• A Surprise:
Surjectivity Comes for
Free!
• Putting The Pieces
Together
The Representation
Theorem
Big ToyThe
Models
Reducing
Value
P(g)(ψ̄) = g(ψ).
We can now state Wigner’s Theorem in the form we shall use it.
Theorem 12 Let f : P(H) → P(K) be a total map of projective
geometries, where dim H > 2. If f preserves orthogonality, meaning
that
φ̄ ⊥ ψ̄ ⇒ f (φ̄) ⊥ f (ψ̄)
then there is a semilinear map g : H → K such that P(g) = f , and
hg(φ) | g(ψ)i = σ(hφ | ψi),
where σ is the homomorphism associated with g . Moreover, this
homomorphism is either the identity or complex conjugation, so g is either
linear or antilinear. The map g is unique up to a phase, i.e. a scalar of
modulus 1.
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 24
Remarks
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
• Overview
• Biextensionaity
• Projectivity =
Biextensionality
• Characterizing Chu
Morphisms
• Injectivity
Assumption
• Orthogonality is
Preserved
• Constructing the Left
Adjoint
• Using Projective
Duality
• Wigner’s Theorem
• Remarks
• A Surprise:
Surjectivity Comes for
Free!
• Putting The Pieces
Together
The Representation
Theorem
Big ToyThe
Models
Reducing
Value
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 25
Remarks
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
• Note that in our case, taking f∗ = f , Pg is just the action of the
biextensional collapse functor on Chu morphisms.
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
• Overview
• Biextensionaity
• Projectivity =
Biextensionality
• Characterizing Chu
Morphisms
• Injectivity
Assumption
• Orthogonality is
Preserved
• Constructing the Left
Adjoint
• Using Projective
Duality
• Wigner’s Theorem
• Remarks
• A Surprise:
Surjectivity Comes for
Free!
• Putting The Pieces
Together
The Representation
Theorem
Big ToyThe
Models
Reducing
Value
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 25
Remarks
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
• Overview
• Biextensionaity
• Projectivity =
• Note that in our case, taking f∗ = f , Pg is just the action of the
biextensional collapse functor on Chu morphisms.
• Note that a total map of projective geometries must necessarily
come from an injective map g on the underlying vector spaces,
since P(g) maps rays to rays, and hence g must have trivial kernel.
Biextensionality
• Characterizing Chu
Morphisms
• Injectivity
Assumption
• Orthogonality is
Preserved
• Constructing the Left
Adjoint
• Using Projective
Duality
• Wigner’s Theorem
• Remarks
• A Surprise:
Surjectivity Comes for
Free!
• Putting The Pieces
Together
The Representation
Theorem
Big ToyThe
Models
Reducing
Value
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 25
Remarks
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
• Overview
• Biextensionaity
• Projectivity =
Biextensionality
• Characterizing Chu
Morphisms
• Injectivity
Assumption
• Orthogonality is
Preserved
• Constructing the Left
Adjoint
• Using Projective
Duality
• Note that in our case, taking f∗ = f , Pg is just the action of the
biextensional collapse functor on Chu morphisms.
• Note that a total map of projective geometries must necessarily
come from an injective map g on the underlying vector spaces,
since P(g) maps rays to rays, and hence g must have trivial kernel.
• For this reason, partial maps of projective geometries are
considered in the Faure-Frölicher approach. However, we are
simply following the ‘logic’ of Chu space morphisms here.
• Wigner’s Theorem
• Remarks
• A Surprise:
Surjectivity Comes for
Free!
• Putting The Pieces
Together
The Representation
Theorem
Big ToyThe
Models
Reducing
Value
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 25
A Surprise: Surjectivity Comes for Free!
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 26
A Surprise: Surjectivity Comes for Free!
Proposition 13 Let g : H → K be a semilinear morphism such that P(g) = f∗
where f is a Chu space morphism, and dim(H) > 0. Suppose that the
endomorphism σ : C → C associated with g is surjective, and hence an
automorphism. Then g is surjective.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 26
A Surprise: Surjectivity Comes for Free!
Proposition 13 Let g : H → K be a semilinear morphism such that P(g) = f∗
where f is a Chu space morphism, and dim(H) > 0. Suppose that the
endomorphism σ : C → C associated with g is surjective, and hence an
automorphism. Then g is surjective.
Proof We write Im g for the set-theoretic direct image of g , which is a linear
subspace of K, since σ is an automorphism. In particular, g carries rays to rays,
since λg(φ) = g(σ −1 (λ)φ).
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 26
A Surprise: Surjectivity Comes for Free!
Proposition 13 Let g : H → K be a semilinear morphism such that P(g) = f∗
where f is a Chu space morphism, and dim(H) > 0. Suppose that the
endomorphism σ : C → C associated with g is surjective, and hence an
automorphism. Then g is surjective.
Proof We write Im g for the set-theoretic direct image of g , which is a linear
subspace of K, since σ is an automorphism. In particular, g carries rays to rays,
since λg(φ) = g(σ −1 (λ)φ).
We claim that for any vector ψ ∈ K◦ which is not in the image of g , ψ ⊥ Im g .
Given such a ψ , for any φ ∈ H◦ it is not the case that f∗ (φ̄) ⊆ ψ̄ ; for otherwise, for
some λ, g(φ) = λψ , and hence g(σ −1 (λ−1 )φ) = ψ . Then by Proposition 6,
f ∗ (ψ̄) = {0}. It follows that for all φ ∈ H◦ ,
ēK (f∗ (φ̄), ψ̄) = ēH (φ̄, {0}) = 0,
and hence by Lemma 8 that ψ ⊥ Im g .
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 26
A Surprise: Surjectivity Comes for Free!
Proposition 13 Let g : H → K be a semilinear morphism such that P(g) = f∗
where f is a Chu space morphism, and dim(H) > 0. Suppose that the
endomorphism σ : C → C associated with g is surjective, and hence an
automorphism. Then g is surjective.
Proof We write Im g for the set-theoretic direct image of g , which is a linear
subspace of K, since σ is an automorphism. In particular, g carries rays to rays,
since λg(φ) = g(σ −1 (λ)φ).
We claim that for any vector ψ ∈ K◦ which is not in the image of g , ψ ⊥ Im g .
Given such a ψ , for any φ ∈ H◦ it is not the case that f∗ (φ̄) ⊆ ψ̄ ; for otherwise, for
some λ, g(φ) = λψ , and hence g(σ −1 (λ−1 )φ) = ψ . Then by Proposition 6,
f ∗ (ψ̄) = {0}. It follows that for all φ ∈ H◦ ,
ēK (f∗ (φ̄), ψ̄) = ēH (φ̄, {0}) = 0,
and hence by Lemma 8 that ψ ⊥ Im g .
Now suppose for a contradiction that such a ψ exists. Consider the vector ψ + χ
where χ is a non-zero vector in Im g , which must exist since g is injective and H
has positive dimension. This vector is not in Im g , nor is it orthogonal to Im g , since
e.g. hψ + χ | χi = hχ | χi =
6 0. This yields the required contradiction.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 26
Putting The Pieces Together
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
• Overview
• Biextensionaity
• Projectivity =
Biextensionality
• Characterizing Chu
Morphisms
• Injectivity
Assumption
• Orthogonality is
Preserved
• Constructing the Left
Adjoint
• Using Projective
Duality
• Wigner’s Theorem
• Remarks
• A Surprise:
Surjectivity Comes for
Free!
• Putting The Pieces
Together
The Representation
Theorem
Big ToyThe
Models
Reducing
Value
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 27
Putting The Pieces Together
Introduction
Chu Spaces
We say that a map U : H → K is semiunitary if it is either unitary or
antiunitary; that is, if it is a bijective map satisfying
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
• Overview
• Biextensionaity
• Projectivity =
Biextensionality
• Characterizing Chu
Morphisms
• Injectivity
Assumption
• Orthogonality is
Preserved
• Constructing the Left
Adjoint
• Using Projective
Duality
U (φ+ψ) = U φ+U ψ,
U (λφ) = σ(λ)U φ,
hU φ | U ψi = σ(hφ | ψi)
where σ is the identity if U is unitary, and complex conjugation if U is
antiunitary. Note that semiunitaries preserve norm, so if U and V are
semiunitaries and U = λV , then |λ| = 1.
• Wigner’s Theorem
• Remarks
• A Surprise:
Surjectivity Comes for
Free!
• Putting The Pieces
Together
The Representation
Theorem
Big ToyThe
Models
Reducing
Value
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 27
Putting The Pieces Together
Introduction
Chu Spaces
We say that a map U : H → K is semiunitary if it is either unitary or
antiunitary; that is, if it is a bijective map satisfying
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
• Overview
• Biextensionaity
• Projectivity =
Biextensionality
• Characterizing Chu
Morphisms
• Injectivity
Assumption
• Orthogonality is
Preserved
• Constructing the Left
Adjoint
• Using Projective
Duality
• Wigner’s Theorem
• Remarks
• A Surprise:
Surjectivity Comes for
Free!
• Putting The Pieces
Together
U (φ+ψ) = U φ+U ψ,
U (λφ) = σ(λ)U φ,
hU φ | U ψi = σ(hφ | ψi)
where σ is the identity if U is unitary, and complex conjugation if U is
antiunitary. Note that semiunitaries preserve norm, so if U and V are
semiunitaries and U = λV , then |λ| = 1.
Theorem 14 Let H, K be Hilbert spaces of dimension greater than 2.
Consider a Chu morphism
(f∗ , f ∗ ) : (P(H), L(H), ēH) → (P(K), L(K), ēK ).
where f∗ is injective. Then there is a semiunitary U : H → K such that
f∗ = P(U ). U is unique up to a phase.
The Representation
Theorem
Big ToyThe
Models
Reducing
Value
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 27
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
• The Big Picture
• Remarks
• Functors
• Not Quite Right Yet
• Biextensionality and
Scalar Factors
• Projectivising The
Symmetry Groupoid
• Jes’ Right
• PR is an
embedding up to a
phase
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Big Toy Models
Basic Concepts
The Representation Theorem
The Big Picture
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 29
The Big Picture
We define a category SymmH as follows:
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 29
The Big Picture
We define a category SymmH as follows:
• The objects are Hilbert spaces of dimension > 2.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 29
The Big Picture
We define a category SymmH as follows:
• The objects are Hilbert spaces of dimension > 2.
• Morphisms U : H → K are semiunitary (i.e. unitary or antiunitary) maps.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 29
The Big Picture
We define a category SymmH as follows:
• The objects are Hilbert spaces of dimension > 2.
• Morphisms U : H → K are semiunitary (i.e. unitary or antiunitary) maps.
• Semiunitaries compose as explained more generally for semilinear maps in
the previous subsection. Since complex conjugation is an involution,
semiunitaries compose according to the rule of signs: two antiunitaries or two
unitaries compose to form a unitary, while a unitary and an antiunitary
compose to form an antiunitary.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 29
The Big Picture
We define a category SymmH as follows:
• The objects are Hilbert spaces of dimension > 2.
• Morphisms U : H → K are semiunitary (i.e. unitary or antiunitary) maps.
• Semiunitaries compose as explained more generally for semilinear maps in
the previous subsection. Since complex conjugation is an involution,
semiunitaries compose according to the rule of signs: two antiunitaries or two
unitaries compose to form a unitary, while a unitary and an antiunitary
compose to form an antiunitary.
This category is a groupoid, i.e. every arrow is an isomorphism.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 29
The Big Picture
We define a category SymmH as follows:
• The objects are Hilbert spaces of dimension > 2.
• Morphisms U : H → K are semiunitary (i.e. unitary or antiunitary) maps.
• Semiunitaries compose as explained more generally for semilinear maps in
the previous subsection. Since complex conjugation is an involution,
semiunitaries compose according to the rule of signs: two antiunitaries or two
unitaries compose to form a unitary, while a unitary and an antiunitary
compose to form an antiunitary.
This category is a groupoid, i.e. every arrow is an isomorphism.
The seminunitaries are the physically significant symmetries of Hilbert space
from the point of view of Quantum Mechanics. The usual dynamics according to the
Schrödinger equation is given by a continuous one-parameter group {U (t)} of
these symmetries; the requirement of continuity forces the U (t) to be unitaries.
However, some important physical symmetries are represented by antiunitaries, e.g.
time reversal and charge conjugation.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 29
Remarks
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 30
Remarks
• By the results of the previous subsection, Chu morphisms essentially force us
to consider the symmetries on Hilbert space. As pointed out there, linear
maps which can be represented as Chu morphisms in the biextensional
category must be injective; and if L : H → K is an injective linear or
antilinear map, then P(L) is injective.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 30
Remarks
• By the results of the previous subsection, Chu morphisms essentially force us
to consider the symmetries on Hilbert space. As pointed out there, linear
maps which can be represented as Chu morphisms in the biextensional
category must be injective; and if L : H → K is an injective linear or
antilinear map, then P(L) is injective.
• Our results then show that if L can be represented as a Chu morphism, it
must in fact be semiunitary.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 30
Remarks
• By the results of the previous subsection, Chu morphisms essentially force us
to consider the symmetries on Hilbert space. As pointed out there, linear
maps which can be represented as Chu morphisms in the biextensional
category must be injective; and if L : H → K is an injective linear or
antilinear map, then P(L) is injective.
• Our results then show that if L can be represented as a Chu morphism, it
must in fact be semiunitary.
• This delineation of the physically significant symmetries by the logic of Chu
morphisms should be seen as a strong point in favour of this representation by
Chu spaces.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 30
Functors
Introduction
We define a functor R : SymmH → eChu[0,1] :
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
• The Big Picture
• Remarks
• Functors
• Not Quite Right Yet
• Biextensionality and
Scalar Factors
• Projectivising The
Symmetry Groupoid
• Jes’ Right
• PR is an
embedding up to a
phase
R : U : H → K 7−→ (U◦ , U −1 ) : (H◦ , L(H), eH ) → (K◦ , L(K), eK )
where U◦ is the restriction of U to H◦ .
As noted in Proposition 2, the inclusion bChu[0,1] ⊂ - eChu[0,1] has
a left adjoint, which we name Q. By Proposition 4, this can be defined on
the image of R as follows:
Q : (H◦ , L(H), eH ) 7→ (PH, L(H), ēH )
and for (U◦ , U −1 ) : (H◦ , L(H), eH ) → (K◦ , L(K), eK ),
Q : (U◦ , U −1 ) 7−→ (PU, U −1 ).
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Big Toy Models
Basic Concepts
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 31
Not Quite Right Yet
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
• The Big Picture
• Remarks
• Functors
• Not Quite Right Yet
• Biextensionality and
Scalar Factors
• Projectivising The
Symmetry Groupoid
• Jes’ Right
• PR is an
embedding up to a
phase
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Big Toy Models
Basic Concepts
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 32
Not Quite Right Yet
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
We write emChu, bmChu for the subcategories of eChu[0,1] and
bChu[0,1] obtained by restricting to Chu morphisms f for which f∗ is
injective. The functors R and Q factor through these subcategories.
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
• The Big Picture
• Remarks
• Functors
• Not Quite Right Yet
• Biextensionality and
Scalar Factors
• Projectivising The
Symmetry Groupoid
• Jes’ Right
• PR is an
embedding up to a
phase
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Big Toy Models
Basic Concepts
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 32
Not Quite Right Yet
Representing Physical
Systems
We write emChu, bmChu for the subcategories of eChu[0,1] and
bChu[0,1] obtained by restricting to Chu morphisms f for which f∗ is
injective. The functors R and Q factor through these subcategories.
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
Proposition 15 Both
Introduction
Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
• The Big Picture
• Remarks
• Functors
• Not Quite Right Yet
• Biextensionality and
Scalar Factors
• Projectivising The
Symmetry Groupoid
• Jes’ Right
• PR is an
R : SymmH → emChu
and
Q : emChu → bmChu
are well-defined functors. R is faithful but not full; Q is full but not faithful.
embedding up to a
phase
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Big Toy Models
Basic Concepts
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 32
Not Quite Right Yet
Representing Physical
Systems
We write emChu, bmChu for the subcategories of eChu[0,1] and
bChu[0,1] obtained by restricting to Chu morphisms f for which f∗ is
injective. The functors R and Q factor through these subcategories.
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
Proposition 15 Both
Introduction
Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
• The Big Picture
• Remarks
• Functors
• Not Quite Right Yet
• Biextensionality and
Scalar Factors
• Projectivising The
Symmetry Groupoid
• Jes’ Right
• PR is an
embedding up to a
phase
Reducing The Value
Set
R : SymmH → emChu
and
Q : emChu → bmChu
are well-defined functors. R is faithful but not full; Q is full but not faithful.
This involves verifying that unitaries and antiunitaries U : H → K do
indeed yield Chu morphisms!
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Big Toy Models
Basic Concepts
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 32
Not Quite Right Yet
Representing Physical
Systems
We write emChu, bmChu for the subcategories of eChu[0,1] and
bChu[0,1] obtained by restricting to Chu morphisms f for which f∗ is
injective. The functors R and Q factor through these subcategories.
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
Proposition 15 Both
Introduction
Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
• The Big Picture
• Remarks
• Functors
• Not Quite Right Yet
• Biextensionality and
Scalar Factors
• Projectivising The
Symmetry Groupoid
• Jes’ Right
• PR is an
embedding up to a
phase
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
R : SymmH → emChu
and
Q : emChu → bmChu
are well-defined functors. R is faithful but not full; Q is full but not faithful.
This involves verifying that unitaries and antiunitaries U : H → K do
indeed yield Chu morphisms!
The key property, for ψ ∈ H◦ and S ∈ L(H), is:
PS (U ψ) = U (PU −1 (S) ψ).
Primer on coalgebra
Big Toy Models
Basic Concepts
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 32
Biextensionality and Scalar Factors
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
• The Big Picture
• Remarks
• Functors
• Not Quite Right Yet
• Biextensionality and
Scalar Factors
• Projectivising The
Symmetry Groupoid
• Jes’ Right
• PR is an
embedding up to a
phase
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Big Toy Models
Basic Concepts
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 33
Biextensionality and Scalar Factors
Introduction
We can analyze the non-fullness of R more precisely as follows.
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
• The Big Picture
• Remarks
• Functors
• Not Quite Right Yet
• Biextensionality and
Proposition 16 Let (U◦ , U −1 ) : (H◦ , L(H), eH ) → (K◦ , L(K), eK )
be a Chu morphism in the image of R. Given an arbitrary function
f : H → C \ {0}, define f U : H◦ → K◦ by:
f U (ψ) = f (ψ)U (ψ).
Then (f U, U −1 ) ∼ (U◦ , U −1 ). Moreover, the ∼-equivalence class of U
is exactly the set of functions of this form.
Scalar Factors
• Projectivising The
Symmetry Groupoid
• Jes’ Right
• PR is an
embedding up to a
phase
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Big Toy Models
Basic Concepts
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 33
Biextensionality and Scalar Factors
Introduction
We can analyze the non-fullness of R more precisely as follows.
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
• The Big Picture
• Remarks
• Functors
• Not Quite Right Yet
• Biextensionality and
Scalar Factors
• Projectivising The
Symmetry Groupoid
• Jes’ Right
• PR is an
embedding up to a
phase
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Proposition 16 Let (U◦ , U −1 ) : (H◦ , L(H), eH ) → (K◦ , L(K), eK )
be a Chu morphism in the image of R. Given an arbitrary function
f : H → C \ {0}, define f U : H◦ → K◦ by:
f U (ψ) = f (ψ)U (ψ).
Then (f U, U −1 ) ∼ (U◦ , U −1 ). Moreover, the ∼-equivalence class of U
is exactly the set of functions of this form.
Thus before biextensional collapse, Chu morphisms can introduce
arbitrary scalar factors pointwise. Once we move to the biextensional
category, we know by Theorem 14 that our representation will be full, and
essentially faithful — up to a global phase. This points to the need for a
projective version of the symmetry groupoid.
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Big Toy Models
Basic Concepts
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 33
Projectivising The Symmetry Groupoid
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 34
Projectivising The Symmetry Groupoid
The mathematical object underlying phases is the circle group U(1):
U(1) = {λ ∈ C | |λ| = 1} = {eiθ | θ ∈ R}
Since λ has modulus 1 if and only if λλ̄ = 1, U(1) is the unitary group on the
one-dimensional Hilbert space.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 34
Projectivising The Symmetry Groupoid
The mathematical object underlying phases is the circle group U(1):
U(1) = {λ ∈ C | |λ| = 1} = {eiθ | θ ∈ R}
Since λ has modulus 1 if and only if λλ̄ = 1, U(1) is the unitary group on the
one-dimensional Hilbert space.
The circle group acts on the symmetry groupoid SymmH by scalar multiplication.
For Hilbert spaces H, K we can define
U(1) × SymmH(H, K) → SymmH(H, K) :: (λ, U ) 7→ λU.
Moreover, this is a category action, meaning that
(λU ) ◦ V = U ◦ (λV ) = λ(U ◦ V ).
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 34
Projectivising The Symmetry Groupoid
The mathematical object underlying phases is the circle group U(1):
U(1) = {λ ∈ C | |λ| = 1} = {eiθ | θ ∈ R}
Since λ has modulus 1 if and only if λλ̄ = 1, U(1) is the unitary group on the
one-dimensional Hilbert space.
The circle group acts on the symmetry groupoid SymmH by scalar multiplication.
For Hilbert spaces H, K we can define
U(1) × SymmH(H, K) → SymmH(H, K) :: (λ, U ) 7→ λU.
Moreover, this is a category action, meaning that
(λU ) ◦ V = U ◦ (λV ) = λ(U ◦ V ).
It follows that we can form a quotient category (in fact again a groupoid) with the
same objects as SymmH, and in which the morphisms will be the orbits of this
group action:
U ∼ V ⇔ ∃λ ∈ U(1). U = λV.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 34
Jes’ Right
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 35
Jes’ Right
We call the resulting category PSymmH, the projective quantum symmetry
groupoid. It is a natural generalization of the standard notion of the projective
unitary group on Hilbert space.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 35
Jes’ Right
We call the resulting category PSymmH, the projective quantum symmetry
groupoid. It is a natural generalization of the standard notion of the projective
unitary group on Hilbert space.
There is a quotient functor P : SymmH → PSymmH, and by virtue of
Theorem 14, we can factor Q ◦ R through this quotient to obtain a functor
PR : PSymmH → bmChu.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 35
Jes’ Right
We call the resulting category PSymmH, the projective quantum symmetry
groupoid. It is a natural generalization of the standard notion of the projective
unitary group on Hilbert space.
There is a quotient functor P : SymmH → PSymmH, and by virtue of
Theorem 14, we can factor Q ◦ R through this quotient to obtain a functor
PR : PSymmH → bmChu.
The situation can be summarized by the following diagram:
SymmH >
R
P
∨
∨
PSymmH >
Big Toy Models
PR
> emChu
Q
∨
∨
>> bmChu
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 35
Jes’ Right
We call the resulting category PSymmH, the projective quantum symmetry
groupoid. It is a natural generalization of the standard notion of the projective
unitary group on Hilbert space.
There is a quotient functor P : SymmH → PSymmH, and by virtue of
Theorem 14, we can factor Q ◦ R through this quotient to obtain a functor
PR : PSymmH → bmChu.
The situation can be summarized by the following diagram:
SymmH >
R
P
∨
∨
PSymmH >
Theorem 17
Big Toy Models
PR
> emChu
Q
∨
∨
>> bmChu
The functor PR : PSymmH → bmChu is full and faithful.
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 35
PR is an embedding up to a phase
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 36
PR is an embedding up to a phase
• To see that PR is essentially injective on objects, we can use the
representation theorems of Piron and Solèr, which tell us that we can
reconstruct H as a Hilbert space from L(H).
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 36
PR is an embedding up to a phase
• To see that PR is essentially injective on objects, we can use the
representation theorems of Piron and Solèr, which tell us that we can
reconstruct H as a Hilbert space from L(H).
• This reconstruction will give us a Hilbert space H′ such that L(H) ∼
= L(H′ ),
and P(H) ∼
= P(H′ ).
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 36
PR is an embedding up to a phase
• To see that PR is essentially injective on objects, we can use the
representation theorems of Piron and Solèr, which tell us that we can
reconstruct H as a Hilbert space from L(H).
• This reconstruction will give us a Hilbert space H′ such that L(H) ∼
= L(H′ ),
and P(H) ∼
= P(H′ ).
• We can apply Wigner’s theorem to this isomorphism to obtain a semiunitary
U :H∼
= H′ from which we can recover the Hilbert space structure on H.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 36
PR is an embedding up to a phase
• To see that PR is essentially injective on objects, we can use the
representation theorems of Piron and Solèr, which tell us that we can
reconstruct H as a Hilbert space from L(H).
• This reconstruction will give us a Hilbert space H′ such that L(H) ∼
= L(H′ ),
and P(H) ∼
= P(H′ ).
• We can apply Wigner’s theorem to this isomorphism to obtain a semiunitary
U :H∼
= H′ from which we can recover the Hilbert space structure on H.
• This means that we have recovered H uniquely to within the coset of idH in
PSymmH.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 36
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
• Generalities
• The Question
• Two Values?
• The Canonical
Possibilistic Reductions
• Two is Too Few
• Other Case
• Analysis
• Three Values
Suffice!
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Big Toy Models
Representing
Physical
Reducing The Value Set
Generalities
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
• Generalities
• The Question
• Two Values?
• The Canonical
Possibilistic Reductions
• Two is Too Few
• Other Case
• Analysis
• Three Values
Suffice!
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Big Toy Models
Representing
Physical
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 38
Generalities
Introduction
Chu Spaces
We now return to the issue of whether it is necessary to use the full unit
interval as the value set for our Chu spaces.
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
• Generalities
• The Question
• Two Values?
• The Canonical
Possibilistic Reductions
• Two is Too Few
• Other Case
• Analysis
• Three Values
Suffice!
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Big Toy Models
Representing
Physical
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 38
Generalities
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
• Generalities
• The Question
• Two Values?
• The Canonical
We now return to the issue of whether it is necessary to use the full unit
interval as the value set for our Chu spaces.
We begin with some generalities. Given a function v : K → L, we define
a functor Fv : ChuK → ChuL :
Fv : (X, A, e) 7→ (X, A, v ◦ e)
and Fv f = f for Chu morphisms f .
Possibilistic Reductions
• Two is Too Few
• Other Case
• Analysis
• Three Values
Suffice!
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Big Toy Models
Representing
Physical
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 38
Generalities
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
We now return to the issue of whether it is necessary to use the full unit
interval as the value set for our Chu spaces.
We begin with some generalities. Given a function v : K → L, we define
a functor Fv : ChuK → ChuL :
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
• Generalities
• The Question
• Two Values?
• The Canonical
Possibilistic Reductions
Fv : (X, A, e) 7→ (X, A, v ◦ e)
and Fv f = f for Chu morphisms f .
Proposition 18
Fv is a faithful functor. If v is injective, it is full.
• Two is Too Few
• Other Case
• Analysis
• Three Values
Suffice!
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Big Toy Models
Representing
Physical
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 38
The Question
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 39
The Question
We can now state the question we wish to pose more precisely:
Is there a mapping v : [0, 1] → K from the unit interval to some
finite set K such that the restriction of the functor Fv to the image of
PR is full, and thus the composition
Fv ◦ PR : PSymmH → bmChuK
is a representation?
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 39
The Question
We can now state the question we wish to pose more precisely:
Is there a mapping v : [0, 1] → K from the unit interval to some
finite set K such that the restriction of the functor Fv to the image of
PR is full, and thus the composition
Fv ◦ PR : PSymmH → bmChuK
is a representation?
There is no general reason to suppose that this is possible; in fact, we shall show
that it is, although not quite in the obvious fashion.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 39
Two Values?
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
• Generalities
• The Question
• Two Values?
• The Canonical
Possibilistic Reductions
• Two is Too Few
• Other Case
• Analysis
• Three Values
Suffice!
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Big Toy Models
Representing
Physical
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 40
Two Values?
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
We shall write n = {0, . . . , n − 1} for the finite ordinals. The most
popular choice of value set for Chu spaces, by far, has been 2, and
indeed many interesting categories can be strictly (and even concretely)
represented in Chu2 .
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
• Generalities
• The Question
• Two Values?
• The Canonical
Possibilistic Reductions
• Two is Too Few
• Other Case
• Analysis
• Three Values
Suffice!
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Big Toy Models
Representing
Physical
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 40
Two Values?
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
• Generalities
• The Question
• Two Values?
• The Canonical
We shall write n = {0, . . . , n − 1} for the finite ordinals. The most
popular choice of value set for Chu spaces, by far, has been 2, and
indeed many interesting categories can be strictly (and even concretely)
represented in Chu2 .
This makes the following question natural:
Question 19
and faithful?
Is there a function v : [0, 1] → 2 such that Fv ◦ PR is full
Possibilistic Reductions
• Two is Too Few
• Other Case
• Analysis
• Three Values
Suffice!
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Big Toy Models
Representing
Physical
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 40
Two Values?
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
• Generalities
• The Question
• Two Values?
• The Canonical
Possibilistic Reductions
• Two is Too Few
• Other Case
• Analysis
• Three Values
We shall write n = {0, . . . , n − 1} for the finite ordinals. The most
popular choice of value set for Chu spaces, by far, has been 2, and
indeed many interesting categories can be strictly (and even concretely)
represented in Chu2 .
This makes the following question natural:
Question 19
and faithful?
Is there a function v : [0, 1] → 2 such that Fv ◦ PR is full
What we can show is that the most plausible candidates for such
functions, yielding the two canonical forms of possibilistic semantics as
a coarse-graining of probabilistic semantics, both in fact fail.
Suffice!
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Big Toy Models
Representing
Physical
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 40
The Canonical Possibilistic Reductions
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
• Generalities
• The Question
• Two Values?
• The Canonical
Possibilistic Reductions
• Two is Too Few
• Other Case
• Analysis
• Three Values
Suffice!
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Big Toy Models
Representing
Physical
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 41
The Canonical Possibilistic Reductions
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Note that any function v : [0, 1] → {0, 1} must lose information either on
0 or on 1 — or both.
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
• Generalities
• The Question
• Two Values?
• The Canonical
Possibilistic Reductions
• Two is Too Few
• Other Case
• Analysis
• Three Values
Suffice!
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Big Toy Models
Representing
Physical
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 41
The Canonical Possibilistic Reductions
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Note that any function v : [0, 1] → {0, 1} must lose information either on
0 or on 1 — or both.
In this sense, the two ‘sharpest’ mappings will be:
v0 : 0 7→ 0, (0, 1] 7→ 1
v1 : [0, 1) 7→ 0, 1 7→ 1.
Reducing The Value
Set
• Generalities
• The Question
• Two Values?
• The Canonical
Possibilistic Reductions
• Two is Too Few
• Other Case
• Analysis
• Three Values
Suffice!
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Big Toy Models
Representing
Physical
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 41
The Canonical Possibilistic Reductions
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
• Generalities
• The Question
• Two Values?
• The Canonical
Possibilistic Reductions
Note that any function v : [0, 1] → {0, 1} must lose information either on
0 or on 1 — or both.
In this sense, the two ‘sharpest’ mappings will be:
v0 : 0 7→ 0, (0, 1] 7→ 1
v1 : [0, 1) 7→ 0, 1 7→ 1.
These are the two canonical reductions of probabilistic to possibilistic
information: the first maps ‘definitely not’ to ‘no’, and anything else to
‘yes’, which is to be read as ‘possibly yes’; the second maps ‘definitely
yes’ to ‘yes’, and anything else to ‘no’, to be read as ‘possibly no’.
• Two is Too Few
• Other Case
• Analysis
• Three Values
Suffice!
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Big Toy Models
Representing
Physical
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 41
The Canonical Possibilistic Reductions
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
• Generalities
• The Question
• Two Values?
• The Canonical
Possibilistic Reductions
• Two is Too Few
• Other Case
• Analysis
• Three Values
Suffice!
Note that any function v : [0, 1] → {0, 1} must lose information either on
0 or on 1 — or both.
In this sense, the two ‘sharpest’ mappings will be:
v0 : 0 7→ 0, (0, 1] 7→ 1
v1 : [0, 1) 7→ 0, 1 7→ 1.
These are the two canonical reductions of probabilistic to possibilistic
information: the first maps ‘definitely not’ to ‘no’, and anything else to
‘yes’, which is to be read as ‘possibly yes’; the second maps ‘definitely
yes’ to ‘yes’, and anything else to ‘no’, to be read as ‘possibly no’.
Note that, under the first of these, we no longer have
eH (ψ, S) = 1 ⇐⇒ ψ ∈ S
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
while under the second, we no longer have
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Big Toy Models
Representing
Physical
eH (ψ, S) = 0 ⇐⇒ ψ ⊥ S.
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 41
Two is Too Few
Proposition 20
Big Toy Models
For neither v = v0 nor v = v1 is Fv ◦ PR full.
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 42
Two is Too Few
Proposition 20
For neither v = v0 nor v = v1 is Fv ◦ PR full.
Let H be a Hilbert space with 2 < dim H < ∞, and let (g, σ) be any semilinear
automorphism of H, where σ can be any automorphism of the complex field. (We
can extend the argument to infinite-dimensional Hilbert space by requiring g to be
continuous.) For each of the above two mappings of the unit interval to 2, we shall
construct a Chu2 endomorphism f : Fv ◦ PR(H) → Fv ◦ PR(H) with
f∗ = P(g). This will show the non-fullness of Fv .
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 42
Two is Too Few
Proposition 20
For neither v = v0 nor v = v1 is Fv ◦ PR full.
Let H be a Hilbert space with 2 < dim H < ∞, and let (g, σ) be any semilinear
automorphism of H, where σ can be any automorphism of the complex field. (We
can extend the argument to infinite-dimensional Hilbert space by requiring g to be
continuous.) For each of the above two mappings of the unit interval to 2, we shall
construct a Chu2 endomorphism f : Fv ◦ PR(H) → Fv ◦ PR(H) with
f∗ = P(g). This will show the non-fullness of Fv .
Case 1 Here we consider the mapping v1 which sends [0, 1) to 0 and fixes 1. In this
case:
ēH (ψ̄, S) = 1 ⇐⇒ ψ ∈ S
and hence the Chu morphism condition on (f∗ , f ∗ ), where f∗ = P(g), is:
ψ ∈ f ∗ (S) ⇐⇒ g(ψ) ∈ S.
Taking f ∗ = g −1 obviously fulfills this condition. Note that, since g is a semilinear
automorphism, and H is finite-dimensional, g −1 : L(H) → L(H) is well-defined.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 42
Other Case
Case 2 Now consider the mapping v0 keeping 0 fixed and sending (0, 1] to 1. In
this case:
ēH (ψ̄, S) = 0 ⇐⇒ ψ ⊥ S
and hence the Chu morphism condition on (f∗ , f ∗ ), where f∗ = P(g), is:
ψ ⊥ f ∗ (S) ⇐⇒ g(ψ) ⊥ S.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 43
Other Case
Case 2 Now consider the mapping v0 keeping 0 fixed and sending (0, 1] to 1. In
this case:
ēH (ψ̄, S) = 0 ⇐⇒ ψ ⊥ S
and hence the Chu morphism condition on (f∗ , f ∗ ), where f∗ = P(g), is:
ψ ⊥ f ∗ (S) ⇐⇒ g(ψ) ⊥ S.
We define f ∗ (S) = g −1 (S ⊥ )⊥ . Note that f ∗ : L(H) → L(H) is well defined, and
also that g −1 (S ⊥ ) is a subspace of H; hence g −1 (S ⊥ )⊥⊥ = g −1 (S ⊥ ).
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 43
Other Case
Case 2 Now consider the mapping v0 keeping 0 fixed and sending (0, 1] to 1. In
this case:
ēH (ψ̄, S) = 0 ⇐⇒ ψ ⊥ S
and hence the Chu morphism condition on (f∗ , f ∗ ), where f∗ = P(g), is:
ψ ⊥ f ∗ (S) ⇐⇒ g(ψ) ⊥ S.
We define f ∗ (S) = g −1 (S ⊥ )⊥ . Note that f ∗ : L(H) → L(H) is well defined, and
also that g −1 (S ⊥ ) is a subspace of H; hence g −1 (S ⊥ )⊥⊥ = g −1 (S ⊥ ).
ψ ⊥ f ∗S
⇐⇒
ψ ∈ g −1 (S ⊥ )⊥⊥ = g −1 (S ⊥ )
⇐⇒
g(ψ) ∈ S ⊥
⇐⇒
g(ψ) ⊥ S.
and hence (f∗ , f ∗ ) is a Chu morphism as required.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 43
Analysis
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 44
Analysis
However, this negative result immediately suggests a remedy: to keep the
interpretations of both 0 and 1 sharp. We can do this with three values! Namely:
v : 0 7→ 0,
(0, 1) 7→ 2,
1 7→ 1
Thus we lose information only on the probabilities strictly between 0 and 1, which
are lumped together as ‘maybe’ — represented here, by arbitrary convention, by 2.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 44
Analysis
However, this negative result immediately suggests a remedy: to keep the
interpretations of both 0 and 1 sharp. We can do this with three values! Namely:
v : 0 7→ 0,
(0, 1) 7→ 2,
1 7→ 1
Thus we lose information only on the probabilities strictly between 0 and 1, which
are lumped together as ‘maybe’ — represented here, by arbitrary convention, by 2.
Why is this adequate? Given a vector ψ and a subspace S , we can write ψ uniquely
as θ + χ, where θ ∈ S and χ ∈ S ⊥ . For non-zero ψ , there are only three
possibilities:
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 44
Analysis
However, this negative result immediately suggests a remedy: to keep the
interpretations of both 0 and 1 sharp. We can do this with three values! Namely:
v : 0 7→ 0,
(0, 1) 7→ 2,
1 7→ 1
Thus we lose information only on the probabilities strictly between 0 and 1, which
are lumped together as ‘maybe’ — represented here, by arbitrary convention, by 2.
Why is this adequate? Given a vector ψ and a subspace S , we can write ψ uniquely
as θ + χ, where θ ∈ S and χ ∈ S ⊥ . For non-zero ψ , there are only three
possibilities:
• θ = 0 and χ 6= 0, so eH (φ, S) = 0
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 44
Analysis
However, this negative result immediately suggests a remedy: to keep the
interpretations of both 0 and 1 sharp. We can do this with three values! Namely:
v : 0 7→ 0,
(0, 1) 7→ 2,
1 7→ 1
Thus we lose information only on the probabilities strictly between 0 and 1, which
are lumped together as ‘maybe’ — represented here, by arbitrary convention, by 2.
Why is this adequate? Given a vector ψ and a subspace S , we can write ψ uniquely
as θ + χ, where θ ∈ S and χ ∈ S ⊥ . For non-zero ψ , there are only three
possibilities:
• θ = 0 and χ 6= 0, so eH (φ, S) = 0
• θ 6= 0 and χ = 0, so eH (φ, S) = 1
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 44
Analysis
However, this negative result immediately suggests a remedy: to keep the
interpretations of both 0 and 1 sharp. We can do this with three values! Namely:
v : 0 7→ 0,
(0, 1) 7→ 2,
1 7→ 1
Thus we lose information only on the probabilities strictly between 0 and 1, which
are lumped together as ‘maybe’ — represented here, by arbitrary convention, by 2.
Why is this adequate? Given a vector ψ and a subspace S , we can write ψ uniquely
as θ + χ, where θ ∈ S and χ ∈ S ⊥ . For non-zero ψ , there are only three
possibilities:
• θ = 0 and χ 6= 0, so eH (φ, S) = 0
• θ 6= 0 and χ = 0, so eH (φ, S) = 1
• θ 6= 0 and χ 6= 0, so eH (ψ, S) ∈ (0, 1), and hence v ◦ eH (ψ, S) = 2.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 44
Analysis
However, this negative result immediately suggests a remedy: to keep the
interpretations of both 0 and 1 sharp. We can do this with three values! Namely:
v : 0 7→ 0,
(0, 1) 7→ 2,
1 7→ 1
Thus we lose information only on the probabilities strictly between 0 and 1, which
are lumped together as ‘maybe’ — represented here, by arbitrary convention, by 2.
Why is this adequate? Given a vector ψ and a subspace S , we can write ψ uniquely
as θ + χ, where θ ∈ S and χ ∈ S ⊥ . For non-zero ψ , there are only three
possibilities:
• θ = 0 and χ 6= 0, so eH (φ, S) = 0
• θ 6= 0 and χ = 0, so eH (φ, S) = 1
• θ 6= 0 and χ 6= 0, so eH (ψ, S) ∈ (0, 1), and hence v ◦ eH (ψ, S) = 2.
These are the only case discriminations which are used in proving the
Representation Theorem.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 44
Three Values Suffice!
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 45
Three Values Suffice!
Hence we have:
Theorem 21 The functor Fv ◦ PR : PSymmH → bmChu3 is a
representation.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 45
Three Values Suffice!
Hence we have:
Theorem 21 The functor Fv ◦ PR : PSymmH → bmChu3 is a
representation.
We note that Chu3 has found some uses in concurrency and verification (Pratt03,
Ivanov08), under a temporal interpretation: the three values are read as ‘before’,
‘during’ and ‘after’, whereas in our setting the three values represent ‘definitely yes’,
‘definitely no’ and ‘maybe’.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 45
Three Values Suffice!
Hence we have:
Theorem 21 The functor Fv ◦ PR : PSymmH → bmChu3 is a
representation.
We note that Chu3 has found some uses in concurrency and verification (Pratt03,
Ivanov08), under a temporal interpretation: the three values are read as ‘before’,
‘during’ and ‘after’, whereas in our setting the three values represent ‘definitely yes’,
‘definitely no’ and ‘maybe’.
Theorem 21 may suggest some interesting uses for 3-valued ‘local logics’ in the
sense of Jon Barwise.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 45
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
• Where Next?
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics in One
Country
Externalising
Contravariance
As
Big Toy Models
Discussion
Where Next?
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
• Where Next?
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics in One
Country
Externalising
Contravariance
As
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 47
Where Next?
Introduction
Chu Spaces
• Connections and contrasts between Chu spaces and coalgebras.
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
• Where Next?
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics in One
Country
Externalising
Contravariance
As
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 47
Where Next?
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
• Connections and contrasts between Chu spaces and coalgebras.
• Mixed states — handled generally at the level of Chu spaces.
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
• Where Next?
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics in One
Country
Externalising
Contravariance
As
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 47
Where Next?
Introduction
Chu Spaces
• Connections and contrasts between Chu spaces and coalgebras.
Representing Physical
Systems
• Mixed states — handled generally at the level of Chu spaces.
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
• Universal Chu spaces.
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
• Where Next?
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics in One
Country
Externalising
Contravariance
As
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 47
Where Next?
Introduction
Chu Spaces
• Connections and contrasts between Chu spaces and coalgebras.
Representing Physical
Systems
• Mixed states — handled generally at the level of Chu spaces.
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
• Universal Chu spaces.
The Representation
Theorem
• Linear and other type theories.
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
• Where Next?
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics in One
Country
Externalising
Contravariance
As
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 47
Where Next?
Introduction
Chu Spaces
• Connections and contrasts between Chu spaces and coalgebras.
Representing Physical
Systems
• Mixed states — handled generally at the level of Chu spaces.
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
• Universal Chu spaces.
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
• Linear and other type theories.
• Local logics.
• Where Next?
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics in One
Country
Externalising
Contravariance
As
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 47
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
• Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics in One
Country
Externalising
Big Toy Models
Contravariance As
Chu Spaces and Coalgebras
Chu Spaces and Coalgebras
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
• Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics in One
Country
Externalising
Big Toy Models
Contravariance As
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 49
Chu Spaces and Coalgebras
Introduction
Chu Spaces
• Coalgebras over Set; ‘universal coalgebra’.
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
• Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics in One
Country
Externalising
Big Toy Models
Contravariance As
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 49
Chu Spaces and Coalgebras
Introduction
Chu Spaces
• Coalgebras over Set; ‘universal coalgebra’.
Representing Physical
Systems
• Each of these general systems models has been studied
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
extensively.
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
• Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics in One
Country
Externalising
Big Toy Models
Contravariance As
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 49
Chu Spaces and Coalgebras
Introduction
Chu Spaces
• Coalgebras over Set; ‘universal coalgebra’.
Representing Physical
Systems
• Each of these general systems models has been studied
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
extensively.
Their connections have not been studied at all.
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
• Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics in One
Country
Externalising
Big Toy Models
Contravariance As
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 49
Chu Spaces and Coalgebras
Introduction
Chu Spaces
• Coalgebras over Set; ‘universal coalgebra’.
Representing Physical
Systems
• Each of these general systems models has been studied
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
• Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
extensively.
Their connections have not been studied at all.
• They have complementary merits and deficiencies.
• Chu spaces have, coalgebras lack: contravariance.
• Coalgebras have, Chu spaces lack: extension in time.
• Symmetry vs. rigidity.
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics in One
Country
Externalising
Big Toy Models
Contravariance As
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 49
Chu Spaces and Coalgebras
Introduction
Chu Spaces
• Coalgebras over Set; ‘universal coalgebra’.
Representing Physical
Systems
• Each of these general systems models has been studied
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
• Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
extensively.
Their connections have not been studied at all.
• They have complementary merits and deficiencies.
• Chu spaces have, coalgebras lack: contravariance.
• Coalgebras have, Chu spaces lack: extension in time.
• Symmetry vs. rigidity.
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics in One
Country
Externalising
Big Toy Models
Contravariance As
• Interesting formal consequences:
• Indexed structure (‘externalising contravariance’)
• Grothendieck construction: new description of Chu spaces.
• Truncation functors.
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 49
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
• Coalgebras
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics in One
Country
Externalising
Contravariance
As
Big Toy Models
Primer on coalgebra
Coalgebras
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
Category theory allows us to dualize algebras to obtain a notion of
coalgebras of an endofunctor. However, while algebras abstract a
familiar set of notions, coalgebras open up a new and rather unexpected
territory, and provides an effective abstraction and mathematical theory
for a central class of computational phenomena:
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
• Coalgebras
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics in One
Country
Externalising
Contravariance
As
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 51
Coalgebras
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Category theory allows us to dualize algebras to obtain a notion of
coalgebras of an endofunctor. However, while algebras abstract a
familiar set of notions, coalgebras open up a new and rather unexpected
territory, and provides an effective abstraction and mathematical theory
for a central class of computational phenomena:
• Programming over infinite data structures: streams, lazy lists,
infinite trees . . .
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
• Coalgebras
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics in One
Country
Externalising
Contravariance
As
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 51
Coalgebras
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Category theory allows us to dualize algebras to obtain a notion of
coalgebras of an endofunctor. However, while algebras abstract a
familiar set of notions, coalgebras open up a new and rather unexpected
territory, and provides an effective abstraction and mathematical theory
for a central class of computational phenomena:
• Programming over infinite data structures: streams, lazy lists,
infinite trees . . .
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
• A novel notion of coinduction
Primer on coalgebra
• Coalgebras
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics in One
Country
Externalising
Contravariance
As
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 51
Coalgebras
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Category theory allows us to dualize algebras to obtain a notion of
coalgebras of an endofunctor. However, while algebras abstract a
familiar set of notions, coalgebras open up a new and rather unexpected
territory, and provides an effective abstraction and mathematical theory
for a central class of computational phenomena:
• Programming over infinite data structures: streams, lazy lists,
infinite trees . . .
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
• A novel notion of coinduction
Primer on coalgebra
• Modelling state-based computations of all kinds
• Coalgebras
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics in One
Country
Externalising
Contravariance
As
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 51
Coalgebras
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Category theory allows us to dualize algebras to obtain a notion of
coalgebras of an endofunctor. However, while algebras abstract a
familiar set of notions, coalgebras open up a new and rather unexpected
territory, and provides an effective abstraction and mathematical theory
for a central class of computational phenomena:
• Programming over infinite data structures: streams, lazy lists,
infinite trees . . .
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
• A novel notion of coinduction
Primer on coalgebra
• Modelling state-based computations of all kinds
• Coalgebras
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
• The key notion of bisimulation equivalence between processes.
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics in One
Country
Externalising
Contravariance
As
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 51
Coalgebras
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Category theory allows us to dualize algebras to obtain a notion of
coalgebras of an endofunctor. However, while algebras abstract a
familiar set of notions, coalgebras open up a new and rather unexpected
territory, and provides an effective abstraction and mathematical theory
for a central class of computational phenomena:
• Programming over infinite data structures: streams, lazy lists,
infinite trees . . .
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
• A novel notion of coinduction
Primer on coalgebra
• Modelling state-based computations of all kinds
• Coalgebras
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
• The key notion of bisimulation equivalence between processes.
• A general coalgebraic logic can be read off from the functor, and
used to specify and reason about properties of systems.
Semantics in One
Country
Externalising
Contravariance
As
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 51
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
• F -Coalgebras
• Final F -coalgebras
• Labelled Transition
Systems
• Transition Graphs as
Coalgebras
• The Final Coalgebra
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Big Toy Models
Comparison:
A First
Basic Concepts
F -Coalgebras
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Let F : C −→ C be a functor.
An F -coalgebra is a pair (A, γ : A −→ F A) for some object A of C.
We say that A is the carrier of the coalgebra, while γ is the behaviour
map.
An F -coalgebra homomorphism from (A, γ : A −→ F A) to
(B, δ : B −→ F B) is an arrow h : A −→ B such that
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
A
γ-
FA
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
• F -Coalgebras
• Final F -coalgebras
• Labelled Transition
Systems
• Transition Graphs as
Coalgebras
h
Fh
?
B
?
δ
- FB
F -coalgebras and their homomorphisms form a category F −Coalg.
• The Final Coalgebra
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Big Toy Models
Comparison:
A First
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 53
Final F -coalgebras
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
An F -coalgebra (C, γ) is final if for every F -coalgebra (A, α) there is a
unique homomorphism from (A, α) to (C, γ).
Proposition 22 If a final F -coalgebra exists, it is unique up to
isomorphism.
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Proposition 23 (Lambek Lemma) If γ : A −→ F A is final, it is an
isomorphism
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
• F -Coalgebras
• Final F -coalgebras
• Labelled Transition
Systems
• Transition Graphs as
Coalgebras
• The Final Coalgebra
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Big Toy Models
Comparison:
A First
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 54
Labelled Transition Systems
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Let A be a set of actions. A labelled transition system over A is a
coalgebra for the functor
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
LTA : Set −→ Set :: X 7→ Pf (A × X).
Such a coalgebra
γ : S −→ Pf (A × S)
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
can be understood operationally as follows:
• S is a set of states
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
• F -Coalgebras
• Final F -coalgebras
• Labelled Transition
Systems
• Transition Graphs as
Coalgebras
• The Final Coalgebra
• For each state s ∈ S , γ(s) specifies the possible transitions from
a
that state. We write s −→ s′ if (a, s′ ) ∈ γ(s). We think of such a
transition as consisting of the system performing the action a, and
changing state from s to s′ . Note that we regard actions as directly
observable, while states are not.
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Big Toy Models
Comparison:
A First
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 55
Transition Graphs as Coalgebras
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Note that any labelled transition graph (or “state machine”) with labels in
A is a coalgebra for LTA .
Examples 1.
a
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
b
1
c
2
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
This corresponds to the coalgebra ({1, 2}, γ)
Discussion
γ : 1 7→ {(a, 1), (b, 2)},
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
• F -Coalgebras
• Final F -coalgebras
• Labelled Transition
2.
c
b
1
Systems
• Transition Graphs as
Coalgebras
• The Final Coalgebra
2 7→ {(c, 2)}
1 7→ {(b, 2), (c, 1)},
a
2
a
2 7→ {(a, 1), (a, 3)},
3
3 7→ ∅
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Big Toy Models
Comparison:
A First
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 56
The Final Coalgebra
Introduction
The key point is this.
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
Proposition 24 For any set A of actions, there is a final LTA -coalgebra
(ProcA , out).
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
• F -Coalgebras
• Final F -coalgebras
• Labelled Transition
Systems
• Transition Graphs as
Coalgebras
• The Final Coalgebra
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Big Toy Models
Comparison:
A First
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 57
The Final Coalgebra
Introduction
The key point is this.
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Proposition 24 For any set A of actions, there is a final LTA -coalgebra
(ProcA , out).
We think of elements of the final coalgebra as processes. The final
coalgebra provides a “universal semantics” for transition systems, which
is “fully abstract” with respect to observable behaviour.
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
• F -Coalgebras
• Final F -coalgebras
• Labelled Transition
Systems
• Transition Graphs as
Coalgebras
• The Final Coalgebra
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Big Toy Models
Comparison:
A First
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 57
The Final Coalgebra
Introduction
The key point is this.
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Proposition 24 For any set A of actions, there is a final LTA -coalgebra
(ProcA , out).
We think of elements of the final coalgebra as processes. The final
coalgebra provides a “universal semantics” for transition systems, which
is “fully abstract” with respect to observable behaviour.
All of this generalizes to a large class of endofunctors.
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
• F -Coalgebras
• Final F -coalgebras
• Labelled Transition
Systems
• Transition Graphs as
Coalgebras
• The Final Coalgebra
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Big Toy Models
Comparison:
A First
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 57
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
• Coalgebras as
Models of Physical
Systems
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics in One
Country
Big Toy Models
Externalising
Representing Physical Systems
As Coalgebras
Coalgebras as Models of Physical Systems
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
• Coalgebras as
Models of Physical
Systems
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics in One
Country
Big Toy Models
Externalising
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 59
Coalgebras as Models of Physical Systems
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
Recall our basic setup: systems are modelled by a set of states S , of
questions Q, and an evaluation
e : S × Q → [0, 1].
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
• Coalgebras as
Models of Physical
Systems
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics in One
Country
Big Toy Models
Externalising
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 59
Coalgebras as Models of Physical Systems
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Recall our basic setup: systems are modelled by a set of states S , of
questions Q, and an evaluation
e : S × Q → [0, 1].
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Problems:
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
• Coalgebras as
Models of Physical
Systems
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics in One
Country
Big Toy Models
Externalising
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 59
Coalgebras as Models of Physical Systems
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Recall our basic setup: systems are modelled by a set of states S , of
questions Q, and an evaluation
e : S × Q → [0, 1].
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Problems:
• In Chu spaces, we get to specify Q as well as S . How do we do
this with coalgebras?
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
• Coalgebras as
Models of Physical
Systems
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics in One
Country
Big Toy Models
Externalising
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 59
Coalgebras as Models of Physical Systems
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Recall our basic setup: systems are modelled by a set of states S , of
questions Q, and an evaluation
e : S × Q → [0, 1].
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
• Coalgebras as
Models of Physical
Systems
Problems:
• In Chu spaces, we get to specify Q as well as S . How do we do
this with coalgebras?
• Q is contravariant (the maps f ∗ go backwards.). Coalgebras are
based on covariant functors. (We could work with domains, but
there are drawbacks).
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics in One
Country
Big Toy Models
Externalising
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 59
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
• First Approximation
• Comparison
• Discussion: Critique
of Coalgebras
• Discussion: In Praise
ofBig
Coalgebras
Toy Models
Comparison: A First Try
First Approximation
Fix a set K . We can define a functor on Set:
FK : X 7→ K PX .
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 61
First Approximation
Fix a set K . We can define a functor on Set:
FK : X 7→ K PX .
If we use the contravariant powerset functor, F will be covariant. Explicitly, for
f :X →Y:
FK f (g)(S) = g(f −1 (S)),
where g ∈ K PX and S ∈ PY .
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 61
First Approximation
Fix a set K . We can define a functor on Set:
FK : X 7→ K PX .
If we use the contravariant powerset functor, F will be covariant. Explicitly, for
f :X →Y:
FK f (g)(S) = g(f −1 (S)),
where g ∈ K PX and S ∈ PY .
A coalgebra for this functor will be a map of the form
α : X → K PX .
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 61
First Approximation
Fix a set K . We can define a functor on Set:
FK : X 7→ K PX .
If we use the contravariant powerset functor, F will be covariant. Explicitly, for
f :X →Y:
FK f (g)(S) = g(f −1 (S)),
where g ∈ K PX and S ∈ PY .
A coalgebra for this functor will be a map of the form
α : X → K PX .
Consider a Chu space C = (X, A, e) over K . We suppose that this Chu space is
normal, meaning that A = PX . We can define an FK -coalgebra on X by
α(x)(S) = e(x, S).
We write GC = (X, α).
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 61
Comparison
Proposition 25 Suppose we are given a Chu morphism f : C → C ′ , where C
and C ′ are normal Chu spaces, such that f ∗ = f∗−1 . Then f∗ : GC → GC ′ is an
FK -algebra homomorphism. Conversely, given any FK -algebra homomorphism
f : GC → GC ′ , then (f, f −1 ) : C → C ′ is a Chu morphism.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 62
Comparison
Proposition 25 Suppose we are given a Chu morphism f : C → C ′ , where C
and C ′ are normal Chu spaces, such that f ∗ = f∗−1 . Then f∗ : GC → GC ′ is an
FK -algebra homomorphism. Conversely, given any FK -algebra homomorphism
f : GC → GC ′ , then (f, f −1 ) : C → C ′ is a Chu morphism.
Let NChuK be the category of normal Chu spaces and Chu morphisms of the
form (f, f −1 ). Then by the Proposition, G extends to a functor
G : NChuK → FK −Coalg, with G(f, f −1 ) = f .
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 62
Comparison
Proposition 25 Suppose we are given a Chu morphism f : C → C ′ , where C
and C ′ are normal Chu spaces, such that f ∗ = f∗−1 . Then f∗ : GC → GC ′ is an
FK -algebra homomorphism. Conversely, given any FK -algebra homomorphism
f : GC → GC ′ , then (f, f −1 ) : C → C ′ is a Chu morphism.
Let NChuK be the category of normal Chu spaces and Chu morphisms of the
form (f, f −1 ). Then by the Proposition, G extends to a functor
G : NChuK → FK −Coalg, with G(f, f −1 ) = f .
There is an evident inverse to this functor.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 62
Comparison
Proposition 25 Suppose we are given a Chu morphism f : C → C ′ , where C
and C ′ are normal Chu spaces, such that f ∗ = f∗−1 . Then f∗ : GC → GC ′ is an
FK -algebra homomorphism. Conversely, given any FK -algebra homomorphism
f : GC → GC ′ , then (f, f −1 ) : C → C ′ is a Chu morphism.
Let NChuK be the category of normal Chu spaces and Chu morphisms of the
form (f, f −1 ). Then by the Proposition, G extends to a functor
G : NChuK → FK −Coalg, with G(f, f −1 ) = f .
There is an evident inverse to this functor.
Proposition 26
Big Toy Models
NChuK and FK −Coalg are isomorphic categories.
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 62
Discussion: Critique of Coalgebras
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 63
Discussion: Critique of Coalgebras
• Assuming Chu spaces are normal is overly restrictive.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 63
Discussion: Critique of Coalgebras
• Assuming Chu spaces are normal is overly restrictive.
The use of powersets, full or not, to represent ‘questions’ is fairly crude and ad
hoc. The degree of freedom afforded by Chu spaces to choose both the
states and the questions appropriately is a major benefit to conceptually
natural and formally adequate modelling of a wide range of situations.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 63
Discussion: Critique of Coalgebras
• Assuming Chu spaces are normal is overly restrictive.
The use of powersets, full or not, to represent ‘questions’ is fairly crude and ad
hoc. The degree of freedom afforded by Chu spaces to choose both the
states and the questions appropriately is a major benefit to conceptually
natural and formally adequate modelling of a wide range of situations.
• The functors FK are somewhat problematic from the point of view of
coalgebra — they fail to preserve weak pullbacks.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 63
Discussion: Critique of Coalgebras
• Assuming Chu spaces are normal is overly restrictive.
The use of powersets, full or not, to represent ‘questions’ is fairly crude and ad
hoc. The degree of freedom afforded by Chu spaces to choose both the
states and the questions appropriately is a major benefit to conceptually
natural and formally adequate modelling of a wide range of situations.
• The functors FK are somewhat problematic from the point of view of
coalgebra — they fail to preserve weak pullbacks.
• They will also fail to have final coalgebras. However, this can be fixed easily
enough by using bounded powerset and bounded partial functions.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 63
Discussion: In Praise of Coalgebras
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
• First Approximation
• Comparison
• Discussion: Critique
of Coalgebras
• Discussion: In Praise
ofBig
Coalgebras
Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 64
Discussion: In Praise of Coalgebras
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
• The coalgebraic point of view can be described as state-based, but
in a way that emphasizes that the meaning of states lies in their
observable behaviour. Indeed, in the “universal model” we shall
construct, the states are determined exactly as the possible
observable behaviours — we actually find a canonical solution for
what the state space should be in these terms. States are
identified exactly if they have the same observable behaviour.
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
• First Approximation
• Comparison
• Discussion: Critique
of Coalgebras
• Discussion: In Praise
ofBig
Coalgebras
Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 64
Discussion: In Praise of Coalgebras
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
• The coalgebraic point of view can be described as state-based, but
in a way that emphasizes that the meaning of states lies in their
observable behaviour. Indeed, in the “universal model” we shall
construct, the states are determined exactly as the possible
observable behaviours — we actually find a canonical solution for
what the state space should be in these terms. States are
identified exactly if they have the same observable behaviour.
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
We can see this as a kind of reconciliation between the ontic and
epistemic standpoints.
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
• First Approximation
• Comparison
• Discussion: Critique
of Coalgebras
• Discussion: In Praise
ofBig
Coalgebras
Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 64
Discussion: In Praise of Coalgebras
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
• The coalgebraic point of view can be described as state-based, but
in a way that emphasizes that the meaning of states lies in their
observable behaviour. Indeed, in the “universal model” we shall
construct, the states are determined exactly as the possible
observable behaviours — we actually find a canonical solution for
what the state space should be in these terms. States are
identified exactly if they have the same observable behaviour.
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
We can see this as a kind of reconciliation between the ontic and
epistemic standpoints.
• Coalgebras allow us to capture the ‘dynamics of measurement’ —
what happens after a measurement — in a way that Chu spaces
don’t. They have ‘extension in time’.
• First Approximation
• Comparison
• Discussion: Critique
of Coalgebras
• Discussion: In Praise
ofBig
Coalgebras
Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 64
Extension in Time
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
• First Approximation
• Comparison
• Discussion: Critique
of Coalgebras
• Discussion: In Praise
ofBig
Coalgebras
Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 65
Extension in Time
Introduction
Consider a coalgebraic representation of stochastic transducers:
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
F : X 7→ Prob(O × X)I
where I is a fixed set of inputs, O a fixed set of outputs, and Prob(S) is
the set of probability distributions on S .
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
• First Approximation
• Comparison
• Discussion: Critique
of Coalgebras
• Discussion: In Praise
ofBig
Coalgebras
Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 65
Extension in Time
Introduction
Consider a coalgebraic representation of stochastic transducers:
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
F : X 7→ Prob(O × X)I
where I is a fixed set of inputs, O a fixed set of outputs, and Prob(S) is
the set of probability distributions on S .
We can think of I as a set of questions, and O as a set of answers
(which we could standardize by only considering yes/no questions).
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
• First Approximation
• Comparison
• Discussion: Critique
of Coalgebras
• Discussion: In Praise
ofBig
Coalgebras
Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 65
Extension in Time
Introduction
Consider a coalgebraic representation of stochastic transducers:
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
F : X 7→ Prob(O × X)I
where I is a fixed set of inputs, O a fixed set of outputs, and Prob(S) is
the set of probability distributions on S .
We can think of I as a set of questions, and O as a set of answers
(which we could standardize by only considering yes/no questions).
What we learn from this is that
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
• First Approximation
• Comparison
• Discussion: Critique
of Coalgebras
• Discussion: In Praise
ofBig
Coalgebras
Toy Models
QM is less nondeterministic/probabilistic than stochastic transducers
since in QM if we know the preparation and the outcome of the
measurement, we know (by the projection postulate) exactly what the
resulting quantum state will be.
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 65
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics in One
Country
• Coalgebraic
Semantics For One
System
Models
•Big
WellToy
Behaved
Semantics in One Country
Coalgebraic Semantics For One System
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 67
Coalgebraic Semantics For One System
We fix attention on a single Hilbert space H. This determines a set of question
Q = L(H).
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 67
Coalgebraic Semantics For One System
We fix attention on a single Hilbert space H. This determines a set of question
Q = L(H).
We now define an endofunctor on Set:
F Q : X 7→ ({0} + (0, 1] × X)Q .
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 67
Coalgebraic Semantics For One System
We fix attention on a single Hilbert space H. This determines a set of question
Q = L(H).
We now define an endofunctor on Set:
F Q : X 7→ ({0} + (0, 1] × X)Q .
A coalgebra for this functor is then a map
α : X → ({0} + (0, 1] × X)Q
The interpretation is that X is a set of states; the coalgebra map sends its state to
its behaviour, which is a function from questions in Q to the probability that the
answer is ‘yes’; and, if the probability is not 0, to the successor state following a
‘yes’ answer.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 67
Well Behaved Functors
Unlike the functors FK , the functors F Q are very well-behaved from the point of
view of coalgebra (they are in fact polynomial functors). They preserve weak
pull-backs, which guarantees a number of nice properties, and they are bounded
and admit final coalgebras
γQ : UQ → ({0} + (0, 1] × UQ )Q .
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 68
Well Behaved Functors
Unlike the functors FK , the functors F Q are very well-behaved from the point of
view of coalgebra (they are in fact polynomial functors). They preserve weak
pull-backs, which guarantees a number of nice properties, and they are bounded
and admit final coalgebras
γQ : UQ → ({0} + (0, 1] × UQ )Q .
The elements of UQ can be visualized as ‘Q-branching trees’ with the arcs labelled
by probabilities.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 68
Representing One Quantum System As A Coalgebra
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 69
Representing One Quantum System As A Coalgebra
The F Q -coalgebra which is of primary interest to us is the map
aH : H◦ → ({0} + (0, 1] × H◦ )Q
defined by:

 0,
eH (ψ, S) = 0
aH (ψ)(S) =
 (r, P ψ), e (ψ, S) = r > 0
S
H
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 69
Representing One Quantum System As A Coalgebra
The F Q -coalgebra which is of primary interest to us is the map
aH : H◦ → ({0} + (0, 1] × H◦ )Q
defined by:

 0,
eH (ψ, S) = 0
aH (ψ)(S) =
 (r, P ψ), e (ψ, S) = r > 0
S
H
The new ingredient compared with the Chu space representation of H is the state
which results in the case of a ‘yes’ answer to the question, which is computed
according to the Lüders rule.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 69
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics in One
Country
Externalising
Contravariance As
Indexing
Big Toy Models
• The Indexed
Externalising Contravariance As
Indexing
The Indexed Category
Introduction
We define a functor
F : Setop → CAT
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
with
Q 7→ F Q −Coalg
and for f : Q′ → Q:
Reducing The Value
Set
′
tf : F Q → F Q :: Θ 7→ Θ ◦ f
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
is a natural transformation, and
Primer on coalgebra
∗
F(f ) = f : Coalg−F
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Q
→ Coalg−F
Q′
f ∗ : (A, α) 7→ (A, tfA ◦ α)
is a functor.
Semantics in One
Country
Externalising
Contravariance As
Indexing
Big Toy Models
• The Indexed
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 71
The Indexed Category
Introduction
We define a functor
F : Setop → CAT
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
with
Q 7→ F Q −Coalg
and for f : Q′ → Q:
Reducing The Value
Set
′
tf : F Q → F Q :: Θ 7→ Θ ◦ f
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
is a natural transformation, and
Primer on coalgebra
∗
F(f ) = f : Coalg−F
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics in One
Country
Externalising
Contravariance As
Indexing
Big Toy Models
• The Indexed
Q
→ Coalg−F
Q′
f ∗ : (A, α) 7→ (A, tfA ◦ α)
is a functor.
Thus we get a strict indexed category of coalgebra categories, with
contravariant indexing.
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 71
The Grothendieck Construction
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Where we have an indexed category, we can apply the Grothendieck
construction to glue all the fibres together (and get a fibration).
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics in One
Country
Externalising
Contravariance As
Indexing
Big Toy Models
• The Indexed
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 72
The Grothendieck Construction
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Where we have an indexed category, we can apply the Grothendieck
construction to glue all the fibres together (and get a fibration).
Given a functor
I : Cop → CAT
R
define I with objects (A, a), where A is an object of C and a is an
object of I(A).
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics in One
Country
Externalising
Contravariance As
Indexing
Big Toy Models
• The Indexed
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 72
The Grothendieck Construction
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Where we have an indexed category, we can apply the Grothendieck
construction to glue all the fibres together (and get a fibration).
Given a functor
I : Cop → CAT
R
define I with objects (A, a), where A is an object of C and a is an
object of I(A).
Arrows are (G, g) : (A, a) → (B, b), where G : B → A and
g : I(G)(a) → b.
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics in One
Country
Externalising
Contravariance As
Indexing
Big Toy Models
• The Indexed
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 72
The Grothendieck Construction
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Where we have an indexed category, we can apply the Grothendieck
construction to glue all the fibres together (and get a fibration).
Given a functor
I : Cop → CAT
R
define I with objects (A, a), where A is an object of C and a is an
object of I(A).
Arrows are (G, g) : (A, a) → (B, b), where G : B → A and
g : I(G)(a) → b.
Composition of (G, g) : (A, a) → (B, b) and (H, h) : (B, b) → (C, c)
is given by
(G ◦ H, h ◦ I(G)(g)) : (A, a) → (C, c).
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics in One
Country
Externalising
Contravariance As
Indexing
Big Toy Models
• The Indexed
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 72
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics in One
Country
Externalising
Contravariance As
Indexing
Big Toy Models
Indexed Comparison With Chu
Spaces
Slicing and Dicing Chu
Q
For each Q, we define ChuK to be the subcategory of ChuK of Chu spaces
(X, Q, e) and morphisms of the form (f∗ , idQ ).
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 74
Slicing and Dicing Chu
Q
For each Q, we define ChuK to be the subcategory of ChuK of Chu spaces
(X, Q, e) and morphisms of the form (f∗ , idQ ).
This doesn’t look too exciting. In fact, it is just the comma category
(− × Q, K̂)
where K̂ : 1 → Set picks out the object K .
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 74
Slicing and Dicing Chu
Q
For each Q, we define ChuK to be the subcategory of ChuK of Chu spaces
(X, Q, e) and morphisms of the form (f∗ , idQ ).
This doesn’t look too exciting. In fact, it is just the comma category
(− × Q, K̂)
where K̂ : 1 → Set picks out the object K .
Given f : Q′ → Q, we define a functor
∗
f :
ChuQ
K
→
Q′
ChuK
:: (X, Q, e) 7→ (X, Q′ , e ◦ (1 × f ))
and which is the identity on morphisms.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 74
Slicing and Dicing Chu
Q
For each Q, we define ChuK to be the subcategory of ChuK of Chu spaces
(X, Q, e) and morphisms of the form (f∗ , idQ ).
This doesn’t look too exciting. In fact, it is just the comma category
(− × Q, K̂)
where K̂ : 1 → Set picks out the object K .
Given f : Q′ → Q, we define a functor
∗
f :
ChuQ
K
→
Q′
ChuK
:: (X, Q, e) 7→ (X, Q′ , e ◦ (1 × f ))
and which is the identity on morphisms.
This gives an indexed category
Chu : Setop → CAT
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 74
Grothendieck puts Chu back together again
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics in One
Country
Externalising
Contravariance As
Indexing
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 75
Grothendieck puts Chu back together again
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Proposition 27
Z
Chu ∼
= ChuK .
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics in One
Country
Externalising
Contravariance As
Indexing
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 75
The Truncation Functor
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics in One
Country
Externalising
Contravariance As
Indexing
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 76
The Truncation Functor
Introduction
Chu Spaces
The relationship between coalgebras and Chu spaces is further clarified
by an indexed truncation functor T : F → Chu.
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics in One
Country
Externalising
Contravariance As
Indexing
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 76
The Truncation Functor
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The relationship between coalgebras and Chu spaces is further clarified
by an indexed truncation functor T : F → Chu.
For each set Q there is a functor
TQ : F Q −Coalg → ChuQ
K
The Representation
Theorem
TQ (X, α) = (X, Q, e)
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
where

 0, α(x)(q) = 0
e(x, q) =
 r, α(x)(q) = (r, x′ )
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics in One
Country
Externalising
Contravariance As
Indexing
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 76
The Truncation Functor
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The relationship between coalgebras and Chu spaces is further clarified
by an indexed truncation functor T : F → Chu.
For each set Q there is a functor
TQ : F Q −Coalg → ChuQ
K
The Representation
Theorem
TQ (X, α) = (X, Q, e)
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
where

 0, α(x)(q) = 0
e(x, q) =
 r, α(x)(q) = (r, x′ )
For f : Q′ → Q there is a natural transformation
′
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics in One
Country
Externalising
Contravariance As
Indexing
Big Toy Models
τf : TQ → TQ
f
τ(X,α)
Q
= (idX , f ) : T (X, α) → T
Q′
(X, α).
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 76
Introduction
Chu Spaces
Representing Physical
Systems
Characterizing Chu
Morphisms on
Quantum Chu Spaces
The Representation
Theorem
Reducing The Value
Set
Discussion
Chu Spaces and
Coalgebras
Primer on coalgebra
Basic Concepts
Representing Physical
Systems As
Coalgebras
Comparison: A First
Try
Semantics in One
Country
Externalising
Contravariance As
Indexing
Big Toy Models
A Universal Model
A Universal Model
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 78
A Universal Model
We can now define a single coalgebra which is universal for quantum systems in
the following sense:
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 78
A Universal Model
We can now define a single coalgebra which is universal for quantum systems in
the following sense:
• Fix a countably-infinite dimensional Hilbert space, e.g. H = ℓ2 (N). Take
Q = L(H). Let (U, γ) be the final coalgebra for F Q .
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 78
A Universal Model
We can now define a single coalgebra which is universal for quantum systems in
the following sense:
• Fix a countably-infinite dimensional Hilbert space, e.g. H = ℓ2 (N). Take
Q = L(H). Let (U, γ) be the final coalgebra for F Q .
• Any quantum system is described by a separable Hilbert space K, say with a
preferred basis. This basis will induce an isometric embedding i : K- - H.
Taking Q′ = L(K), this induces a map f = i−1 : Q → Q′ . This in turn
′
∗
Q
induces a functor f : F −Coalg → F Q −Coalg.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 78
A Universal Model
We can now define a single coalgebra which is universal for quantum systems in
the following sense:
• Fix a countably-infinite dimensional Hilbert space, e.g. H = ℓ2 (N). Take
Q = L(H). Let (U, γ) be the final coalgebra for F Q .
• Any quantum system is described by a separable Hilbert space K, say with a
preferred basis. This basis will induce an isometric embedding i : K- - H.
Taking Q′ = L(K), this induces a map f = i−1 : Q → Q′ . This in turn
′
∗
Q
induces a functor f : F −Coalg → F Q −Coalg.
• This functor can be applied to the coalgebra (K◦ , α) corresponding to the
Hilbert space K to yield a coalgebra in F Q −Coalg.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 78
Universality
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 79
Universality
• Since (U, γ) is the final coalgebra in F Q −Coalg, there is a unique
coalgebra homomorphism h : f ∗ (K◦ , α) → (U, γ).
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 79
Universality
• Since (U, γ) is the final coalgebra in F Q −Coalg, there is a unique
coalgebra homomorphism h : f ∗ (K◦ , α) → (U, γ).
• This homomorphism maps the quantum system (K◦ , α) into (U, γ) in a fully
abstract fashion, i.e. identifying states precisely according to observational
equivalence.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 79
Universality
• Since (U, γ) is the final coalgebra in F Q −Coalg, there is a unique
coalgebra homomorphism h : f ∗ (K◦ , α) → (U, γ).
• This homomorphism maps the quantum system (K◦ , α) into (U, γ) in a fully
abstract fashion, i.e. identifying states precisely according to observational
equivalence.
• This homomorphism is an arrow in the Grothendieck category.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 79
Universality
• Since (U, γ) is the final coalgebra in F Q −Coalg, there is a unique
coalgebra homomorphism h : f ∗ (K◦ , α) → (U, γ).
• This homomorphism maps the quantum system (K◦ , α) into (U, γ) in a fully
abstract fashion, i.e. identifying states precisely according to observational
equivalence.
• This homomorphism is an arrow in the Grothendieck category.
• This works for all quantum systems, with respect to a single coalgebra.
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 79
Universality
• Since (U, γ) is the final coalgebra in F Q −Coalg, there is a unique
coalgebra homomorphism h : f ∗ (K◦ , α) → (U, γ).
• This homomorphism maps the quantum system (K◦ , α) into (U, γ) in a fully
abstract fashion, i.e. identifying states precisely according to observational
equivalence.
• This homomorphism is an arrow in the Grothendieck category.
• This works for all quantum systems, with respect to a single coalgebra.
This is truly a Big Toy Model!
Big Toy Models
Workshop on Informatic Penomena 2009 – 79