Agents, subsystems, and the conservation of information
Giulio Chiribella

TL;DR
This paper introduces a general framework for defining subsystems in various physical theories, including quantum and classical mechanics, and extends the purification principle to broader settings involving coherent superpositions.
Contribution
It proposes a universal construction linking agents to subsystems in general physical theories, extending the purification principle beyond quantum mechanics.
Findings
Subsystems can be defined via agents in general theories.
All states of subsystems admit a canonical purification.
The framework unifies classical and quantum subsystem notions.
Abstract
Dividing the world into subsystems is an important component of the scientific method. The choice of subsystems, however, is not defined a priori. Typically, it is dictated by experimental capabilities, which may be different for different agents. Here we propose a way to define subsystems in general physical theories, including theories beyond quantum and classical mechanics. Our construction associates every agent A with a subsystem SA, equipped with its set of states and its set of transformations. In quantum theory, this construction accommodates the notion of subsystems as factors of a tensor product Hilbert space, as well as the notion of subsystems associated to a subalgebra of operators. Classical systems can be interpreted as subsystems of quantum systems in different ways, by applying our construction to agents who have access to different sets of operations, including…
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