Noncommutative Number Systems for Quantum Information
Otto C.W. Kong (Nat'l Central U, Taiwan)

TL;DR
This paper explores the use of noncommutative algebra, specifically matrices, as a framework for representing quantum observables, offering a realistic interpretation of quantum mechanics that parallels classical theories.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach to assign noncommutative matrix values to quantum observables, providing a clearer conceptual understanding of quantum information.
Findings
Matrices can serve as noncommutative values of physical quantities.
The approach clarifies the assignment of matrix values to observables.
It offers a realistic interpretation of quantum mechanics similar to classical theory.
Abstract
Dirac talked about q-numbers versus c-numbers. Quantum observables are q-number variables that generally do not commute among themselves. He was proposing to have a generalized form of numbers as elements of a noncommutative algebra. That was Dirac's appreciation of the mathematical properties of the physical quantities as presented in Heisenberg's new quantum theory. After all, the familiar real, or complex, number system only came into existence through the history of mathematics. Values of physical quantities having a commutative product is an assumption that is not compatible with quantum physics. The revolutionary idea of Heisenberg and Dirac was pulled back to a much more conservative setting by the work of Schr\"odinger, followed by Born and Bohr. What Bohr missed is that the real number values we obtained from our measurements are only a consequence of the design of the kind of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsComputability, Logic, AI Algorithms · Quantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Chaos-based Image/Signal Encryption
