Partial Description of Quantum States
Olivier Brunet (Leibniz - IMAG)

TL;DR
This paper proposes a new formalism called partial descriptions for quantum states, based on experimentally accessible measurement outcomes, which offers a more expressive alternative to traditional vector-based representations.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of partial descriptions and partial states, providing a novel, measurement-based formalism that surpasses orthodox vector-ray descriptions in expressiveness.
Findings
Partial states can describe quantum states more expressively than traditional methods.
The formalism is based solely on outcomes of finite measurements.
Partial descriptions exclude impossible outcomes, refining quantum state knowledge.
Abstract
One of the most central and controversial element of quantum mechanics is the use of non zero vectors of a Hilbert space (or, more generally, of one dimension subspaces) for representing the state of a quantum system. In particular, the question whether such a representation is complete has been debated since almost the early days of quantum mechanics. In this article, we develop an alternate way to formalize knowledge about the state of quantum systems, based solely on experimentally accessible elements, namely on outcomes of finite measurements. We introduce what we call partial description which, given a feasible measurement, indicates some outcomes which are known to be impossible (i.e. known to have a probability equal to 0 to occur) and hence have to be discarded. Then, we introduce partial states (which are partial descriptions providing as much information as possible) and…
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