RUS  ENG
Full version
JOURNALS // Teoreticheskaya i Matematicheskaya Fizika // Archive

TMF, 2007 Volume 152, Number 2, Pages 248–264 (Mi tmf6085)

This article is cited in 9 papers

The physical interpretation of partial traces: Two nonstandard views

C. Garola, S. Sozzo

Lecce University

Abstract: Mixed states are introduced in physics to express our ignorance about the actual state of a physical system and are represented in standard quantum mechanics by density operators. Such operators also appear if we consider a (pure) entangled state of a compound system $\Omega$ and take partial traces on the projection operator representing it. But because the coefficients in the convex sums expressing them never bear the ignorance interpretation in this case, they represent not mixed states (proper mixtures) but improper mixtures of the subsystems. Hence, states cannot be attributed to the subsystems of a compound physical system in an entangled state (the subentity problem). We discuss two alternative proposals that can be developed in the Brussels and the Lecce approaches. We firstly summarize the general framework provided by the Brussels approach, which suggests that improper mixtures can be regarded as new pure states. We then show that improper mixtures can also be regarded as true (but nonpure) states according to the Lecce approach. Despite their different terminologies, the two proposals seem compatible.

Keywords: quantum mechanics, improper mixture, subentity problem, Brussels approach, Lecce approach, semantic realism.

DOI: 10.4213/tmf6085


 English version:
Theoretical and Mathematical Physics, 2007, 152:2, 1087–1098

Bibliographic databases:


© Steklov Math. Inst. of RAS, 2024