Coecke, Pavlovic, Vicary, A New Description of Orthogonal Bases PDF
Coecke, Pavlovic, Vicary, A New Description of Orthogonal Bases PDF
Coecke, Pavlovic, Vicary, A New Description of Orthogonal Bases PDF
Abstract
We show that an orthogonal basis for a finite-dimensional Hilbert
space can be equivalently characterised as a commutative -Frobenius
monoid in the category FdHilb, which has finite-dimensional Hilbert
spaces as objects and continuous linear maps as morphisms, and tensor
product for the monoidal structure. The basis is normalised exactly
when the corresponding commutative -Frobenius monoid is special.
Hence orthogonal and orthonormal bases can be axiomatised in terms
of composition of operations and tensor product only, without any
explicit reference to the underlying vector spaces. This axiomatisation
moreover admits an operational interpretation, as the comultiplication
copies the basis vectors and the counit uniformly deletes them. That
is, we rely on the distinct ability to clone and delete classical data as
compared to quantum data to capture basis vectors. For this reason our
result has important implications for categorical quantum mechanics.
1 Introduction
Given any orthonormal basis {|i i}i in a finite dimensional Hilbert space H
we can always define the linear maps
: H H H :: |i i 7 |i i |i i (1)
and
: H C :: |i i 7 1 . (2)
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applications in the area of categorical quantum mechanics, for example,
for describing the flow of classical information in quantum informatic
protocols [6], for defining complementarity and special quantum logic
gates in quantum computational schemes [4] and for constructing discrete
models for quantum reasoning [5]. In this paper, we establish that every
commutative special -Frobenius monoids arises from an orthonormal basis,
and that dropping the specialty condition gives an orthogonal basis.
The plan of the paper is as follows:
2 Preliminaries
The research area of categorical quantum mechanics emerged from the
observation that the subtle details of important, experimentally-established
quantum informatic protocols can already be specified at an abstract
category-theoretic level [1]. The background structure is that of a symmetric
monoidal -category [1, 13], a symmetric monoidal category together with a
identity-on-objects involutive endofunctor which coherently preserves the
symmetric monoidal structure. Within this context one then aims to
maximise the
expressiveness
additional structure
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ratio. Additional structure on which we rely in this paper is that of
internal Frobenius algebras [3, 10], more specifically, internal commutative -
Frobenius monoids [6]. Relative to the quantum universe which is modelled
by the symmetric monoidal -category these commutative -Frobenius
monoids model the classical interfaces, and enable us to specify projector
spectra, measurements, and classical data flows [6].
X /X X X
X XL
LLL
LLm
LLL
LL%
X X LL mX
LLL
LLL
LLL
%
X X X /X X
Xm
m = idX ,
and it is commutative if
= .
A (special) (commutative) -Frobenius monoid in a symmetric monoidal -
category is a triple (X, m, u) such that (X, m, u, = m , = u ) is a (special)
(commutative) Frobenius algebra.
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Recall that in a symmetric monoidal category a morphism f : X Y is
a monoid homomorphism for monoids (X, m, u) and (Y, m , u ) if
f m = m (f f ) and f u = u ,
(|i) = |i |i .
No other vectors besides those in {|i i}i will satisfy this equation since for
dim(H)
X hi |i
|i = |i i
i=1
hi |i i
so ( (
|i i |i i |i i i = j
|i i |j i 7 7
0 0 i=6 j
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and
(
idH idH |i i |i i i = j
|i i |j i 7 |i i |j i |j i 7 .
0 i=6 j
: C H :: 1 7 |i
: H C :: |i 7 h|i
and hence h| = H .
Let (H, m, u) be a commutative -Frobenius monoid. Given such a
commutative -Frobenius monoid any element H induces a linear map
R := m (idA ) : H H ,
its its right action. We draw this right action in the following way:
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merging of the two lines represents the multiplication operation m. Since H
is a Hilbert space, R has an adjoint
R : H H.
The splitting of the line into two represents the comultiplication, and the
dot represents the linear map : H C. We show that this adjoint to a
right action is also the right action of some element of H.
Proof. We draw the Frobenius law of definition 2.1 in the following way:
= =
= =
We can now use the unit law and the Frobenius law to redraw the graphical
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representation of R in the following way:
= = =
C(I, X) C(X, X) :: 7 R
Proof. Using the Frobenius and unit identities and the fact that the -functor
is an involution we first show that () as in Lemma 4.1 is involutive:
( )
= = = =
( ) ( )
The adjoint is an involution on C(X, X) so since R = R involution
is indeed preserved. The mapping is moreover injective, since by the
unit equation we have R u = . It is straightforward to show that
multiplication and unit are preserved. Preservation of the vector space
structure in the case that C = FdHilb follows by linearity of m.
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inherits algebra structure from FdHilb(H, H). Now, since any finite-
dimensional involution-closed subalgebra of a C*-algebra is also a C*-
algebra, it follows that any -Frobenius monoid in FdHilb is a C*-algebra,
in particular, it can be given a C*-algebra norm.
Remark 4.4. Note that in the above we did not assume the -Frobenius
monoid to be commutative. More on this is in [14].
Corollary 4.5. The copyable elements for any commutative -Frobenius
monoid on H in FdHilb form a basis for H.
Proof. Given that i and j are comonoid homomorphisms, and making use
of one of the Frobenius identities, we can derive the following equation:
i i j i j i j i j j
= = =
i i i i i i i i i i
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Switching the roles of i and j we can obtain another similar equation, and
writing both equations in bra-ket notation we obtain
hi |i i = hi |j i and hj |j i = hj |i i.
It follows that these inner products are real, and that they are all equal:
hi |i i = hi |j i = hj |i i = hj |j i.
hi j |i j i = hi |i i hi |j i hj |i i + hj |j i = 0
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original basis, and we construct a new orthogonal basis consisting of those
elements which are perfectly copied by the comultiplication. This new basis
must be at least as large as our original basis. However, since any two
bases for a finite-dimensional Hilbert space must have the same number of
elements, the new basis is actually the same as the original basis.
Now assume we begin with a commutative -Frobenius monoid. We
construct our orthogonal basis as those elements which are perfectly copied,
and construct our new monoid as the unique -Frobenius monoid which
perfectly copies this basis. However, since the original monoid also perfectly
copies this basis, by uniqueness the two monoids are the same.
and it is clear that this is the identity if and only if the vectors |i i are
normalised.
Interestingly, it is already known that, for a finite-dimensional complex
vector space, a basis exactly corresponds to a choice of special commutative
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Frobenius algebra1 . Of course, it does not make sense to ask whether
such a Frobenius algebra is -Frobenius, or whether the elements of such a
basis are normalised or orthogonal. This result follows from the fact that a
special commutative Frobenius algebra is necessarily strongly separable, and
since the ground field is of characteristic 0, it is therefore necessarily finite-
dimensional and semisimple [2]. Such an algebra is canonically isomorphic
to a finite cartesian product of the complex numbers, up to permutation,
and the basis elements are given by the number 1 in each of the complex
factors.
In summary, on a finite-dimensional complex Hilbert space, we can
describe different types of basis very precisely with the following structures:
The inner product on the Hilbert space does not play a role for the
case of the arbitrary basis. In every case, the basis is recovered from
the Frobenius algebra as those vectors which are perfectly copied by the
comultiplication, and the Frobenius algebra is recovered from the basis as
the unique Frobenius algebra of the correct type with a comultiplication
that perfectly copies the basis.
It is interesting to consider whether an arbitrary commutative Frobenius
algebra on a complex vector space might also correspond to some type of
basis structure. In fact, it does not, and such Frobenius algebras can be
very wild indeed. It is perhaps surprising that the specialness axiom and
the -Frobenius axiom can both serve independently to tame this wildness.
7 Categorical statements
We have shown that a commutative -Frobenius monoid in FdHilb
corresponds to a basis of a finite-dimensional Hilbert space. Any such basis
is determined up to unitary isomorphism by the norms of the basis elements,
which constitute a list of positive real numbers.
If a homomorphism between two commutative -Frobenius monoids
preserves all of the structure the multiplication, unit, comultiplication
1
Thanks to John Baez for pointing this out.
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and counit then it is necessarily an isomorphism, and in FdHilb, it is
necessarily unitary. Such a homomorphism will map one basis onto another,
taking basis elements onto basis elements of the same norm. This leads to
the following result:
Corollary 7.1. The category of commutative -Frobenius monoids in
FdHilb, with morphisms preserving all of the Frobenius structure, is
equivalent to the groupoid of finite lists of real numbers and isomorphisms
that preserve the numbers, which has objects given by finite sets equipped
with functions into the positive real numbers, and morphisms given by
isomorphisms of sets that preserve the functions into the real numbers.
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be considered as a finite set with the extra structure of a vector space and
inner product.
References
[1] S. Abramsky and B. Coecke (2004) A categorical semantics of
quantum protocols. In: Proceedings of 19th IEEE conference on
Logic in Computer Science, pages 415425. IEEE Press. arXiv:quant-
ph/0402130 & arXiv:0808.1023.
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[10] F. W. Lawvere (1969) Ordinal sums and equational doctrines. In:
Seminar on Triples and Categorical Homology Theory, pages 141
155, Springer Lecture Notes in Mathematics 80. Springer-Verlag.
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