Dynamics in an emergent quantum-like state space generated by a nonlinear classical network
Gregory D. Scholes

TL;DR
This paper introduces a framework linking classical networks to a quantum-like state space, revealing how classical synchronization influences quantum-like properties and decoherence, with implications for understanding classical-quantum analogies.
Contribution
It demonstrates how a classical coupled oscillator system can generate a quantum-like state space with properties similar to quantum states, including decoherence and no-cloning, through a graph-based approach.
Findings
Strong coupling leads to unitary, quantum-like evolution.
Decoherence manifests as decay of off-diagonal elements.
No-cloning applies to both classical and quantum-like states.
Abstract
This work exploits a framework whereby a graph (in the mathematical sense) serves to connect a classical system to a state space that we call `quantum-like' (QL). The QL states comprise arbitrary superpositions of states in a tensor product basis. The graph plays a special dual role by directing design of the classical system and defining the state space. We study a specific example of a large, dynamical classical system -- a system of coupled phase oscillators -- that maps, via a graph, to the QL state space. We investigate how mixedness of the state diminishes or increases as the underlying classical system synchronizes or de-synchronizes respectively. This shows the interplay between the nonlinear dynamics of the variables of the classical system and the QL state space. We prove that maps from one time point to another in the state space are linear maps. In the limit of a strongly…
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