Amplification, inference, and the manifestation of objective classical information
Michael Zwolak

TL;DR
This paper explores how objective classical information emerges from quantum systems through environment interactions, introducing bounds on accessible information and linking amplification to the quantum Chernoff bound.
Contribution
It introduces a new accessible information bound from quantum-classical states and connects amplification in decoherence to the quantum Chernoff bound for the first time.
Findings
Accessible information bounds are tighter than the Holevo quantity in certain models.
Good decoherence leads to the accessible information reflecting pointer states.
Amplification is quantitatively related to the quantum Chernoff bound.
Abstract
Our everyday reality is characterized by objective informationinformation that is selected and amplified by the environment that interacts with quantum systems. Many observers can accurately infer that information indirectly by making measurements on fragments of the environment. The correlations between the system, , and a fragment, , of the environment, , is often quantified by the quantum mutual information or the Holevo quantity that bounds the classical information about transmittable by a quantum channel . The latter is a quantum mutual information but of a classical-quantum state where measurement has selected outcomes on . The measurement generically reflects the influence of the remaining environment, , but can also reflect hypothetical questions to deduce…
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