Effect Algebra
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Effect algebras are partial algebras which abstract the (partial) algebraic properties of events that can be observed in
quantum mechanics Quantum mechanics is a fundamental theory in physics that provides a description of the physical properties of nature at the scale of atoms and subatomic particles. It is the foundation of all quantum physics including quantum chemistry, ...
. Structures equivalent to effect algebras were introduced by three different research groups in theoretical physics or mathematics in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Since then, their mathematical properties and physical as well as computational significance have been studied by researchers in
theoretical physics Theoretical physics is a branch of physics that employs mathematical models and abstractions of physical objects and systems to rationalize, explain and predict natural phenomena. This is in contrast to experimental physics, which uses experim ...
,
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and
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.


History

In 1989, Giuntini and Greuling introduced structures for studying ''unsharp properties'', meaning those quantum events whose
probability Probability is the branch of mathematics concerning numerical descriptions of how likely an Event (probability theory), event is to occur, or how likely it is that a proposition is true. The probability of an event is a number between 0 and ...
of occurring is strictly between zero and one (and is thus not an either-or event).Foulis, David J. "A Half-Century of Quantum Logic. What Have We Learned?" ''in'' Aerts, Diederik (ed.); Pykacz, Jarosław (ed.) ''Quantum Structures and the Nature of Reality.'' Springer, Dordrecht 1999. ISBN 978-94-017-2834-8. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-017-2834-8. In 1994, Chovanec and Kôpka introduced ''D-posets'' as posets with a partially defined ''difference operation''. In the same year, the paper by Bennet and Foulis ''Effect algebras and unsharp quantum logics'' was published. While it was this last paper that first used the term ''effect algebra'', it was shown that all three structures are equivalent. The proof of isomorphism of categories of D-posets and effect algebras is given for instance by Dvurecenskij and Pulmannova.


Motivation

The operational approach to quantum mechanics takes the set of observable (experimental) outcomes as the constitutive notion of a physical system. That is, a physical system is seen as a collection of events which may occur and thus have a measurable effect on the reality. Such events are called ''effects''. This perspective already imposes some constrains on the mathematical structure describing the system: we need to be able to associate a probability to each effect. In the Hilbert space formalism, effects correspond to positive semidefinite self-adjoint operators which lie below the identity operator in the following partial order: A \leq B if and only if B - A is positive semidefinite. The condition of being positive semidefinite guarantees that expectation values are non-negative, and being below the identity operator yields probabilities. Now we can define two operations on the Hilbert space effects: A':= I - A and A+B ''if A+B\leq I'', where I denotes the identity operator. Note that A' is positive semidefinite and below I since A is, thus it is always defined. One can think of A' as the negation of A. While A+B is always positive semidefinite, it is not defined for all pairs: we have to restrict the domain of definition for those pairs of effects whose sum stays below the identity. Such pairs are called ''orthogonal''; orthogonality reflects simultaneous measurability of observables.


Definition

An ''effect algebra'' is a
partial algebra In abstract algebra, a partial algebra is a generalization of universal algebra to partial operations. Example(s) * partial groupoid * field Field may refer to: Expanses of open ground * Field (agriculture), an area of land used for agricultu ...
consisting of a set E, constants 0 and 1 in E, a total
unary operation In mathematics, an unary operation is an operation with only one operand, i.e. a single input. This is in contrast to binary operations, which use two operands. An example is any function , where is a set. The function is a unary operation on ...
':E\rightarrow E, a
binary relation In mathematics, a binary relation associates elements of one set, called the ''domain'', with elements of another set, called the ''codomain''. A binary relation over Set (mathematics), sets and is a new set of ordered pairs consisting of ele ...
\bot\subseteq E\times E, and a
binary operation In mathematics, a binary operation or dyadic operation is a rule for combining two elements (called operands) to produce another element. More formally, a binary operation is an operation of arity two. More specifically, an internal binary op ...
\oplus : \bot \rightarrow E, such that the following hold for all a,b,c\in E: * ''commutativity'': if a\perp b, then b\perp a and a\oplus b=b\oplus a, * ''associativity'': if a\perp b and (a\oplus b)\perp c, then b\perp c and a\perp (b\oplus c) as well as (a\oplus b)\oplus c = a\oplus (b\oplus c), * ''orthosupplementation'': a\perp a' and a\oplus a'=1, and if a\perp b such that a\oplus b=1, then b=a', * ''zero-one law'': if a\perp 1, then a=0. The unary operation ' is called ''orthosupplementation'' and a' the ''orthosupplement'' of a. The domain of definition \bot of \oplus is called the ''orthogonality relation'' on E, and a,b\in E are called ''orthogonal'' if and only if a\perp b. The operation \oplus is referred to as the ''orthogonal sum'' or simply the ''sum''.


Properties

The following can be shown for any elements a,b and c of an effect algebra, assuming a\perp b,c: * a''=a, * 0'=1, * a\perp 0, and a\oplus 0=a, * a\oplus b=0 implies a=b=0, * a\oplus b = a\oplus c implies b=c.


Order properties

Every effect algebra E is partially ordered as follows: a\leq b if and only if there is a c\in E such that a\perp c and a\oplus c = b. This partial order satisfies: * a\leq b if and only if b'\leq a', * a\perp b if and only if a\leq b'.


Examples


Orthoalgebras

If the last axiom in the definition of an effect algebra is replaced by: * if a\perp a, then a=0, one obtains the definition of an ''orthoalgebra''. Since this axiom implies the last axiom for effect algebras (in the presence of the other axioms), every orthoalgebra is an effect algebra. Examples of orthoalgebras (and hence of effect algebras) include: * Boolean algebras with negation as orthosupplementation and the join restricted to disjoint elements as the sum, * orthomodular posets, * orthomodular lattices, * ''σ''-algebras with complementation as orthosupplementation and the union restricted to disjoint elements as the sum, * Hilbert space projections with orthosupplementation and the sum defined as for the Hilbert space effects.


MV-algebras

Any
MV-algebra In abstract algebra, a branch of pure mathematics, an MV-algebra is an algebraic structure with a binary operation \oplus, a unary operation \neg, and the constant 0, satisfying certain axioms. MV-algebras are the algebraic semantics of Łukasie ...
is an effect algebra (but not, in general, an orthoalgebra) with the unary operation as orthosupplementation and the binary operation restricted to orthogonal elements as the sum. In the context of MV-algebras, orthogonality of a pair of elements a,b is defined as a'\oplus b'=1. This coincides with orthogonality when an MV-algebra is viewed as an effect algebra. An important example of an MV-algebra is the
unit interval In mathematics, the unit interval is the closed interval , that is, the set of all real numbers that are greater than or equal to 0 and less than or equal to 1. It is often denoted ' (capital letter ). In addition to its role in real analysis, ...
,1/math> with operations a'=1-a and a\oplus b = \max(a+b,1). Seen as an effect algebra, two elements of the unit interval are orthogonal if and only if a+b\leq 1 and then a\oplus b = a+b.


The set of effects of a unital C*-algebra

Slightly generalising the motivating example of Hilbert space effects, take the set of effects on a unital C*-algebra \mathfrak, i.e. the elements a\in \mathfrak satisfying 0\leq a \leq 1. The addition operation on a,b\in ,1 is defined when a+b\leq 1 and then a\oplus b = a+b. The orthosupplementation is given by a' = 1-a.


Types of effect algebras

There are various types of effect algebras that have been studied. * ''Interval effect algebras'' that arise as an interval ,uG of some ordered Abelian group G. * ''Convex effect algebras'' have an action of the real unit interval ,1/math> on the algebra. A representation theorem of Gudder shows that these all arise as an interval effect algebra of a real ordered vector space. * Lattice effect algebras where the order structure forms a lattice. * Effect algebras satisfying the ''Riesz decomposition property'': an
MV-algebra In abstract algebra, a branch of pure mathematics, an MV-algebra is an algebraic structure with a binary operation \oplus, a unary operation \neg, and the constant 0, satisfying certain axioms. MV-algebras are the algebraic semantics of Łukasie ...
is precisely a lattice effect algebra with the Riesz decomposition property. * ''Sequential effect algebras'' have an additional ''sequential product'' operation that models the Lüders product on a C*-algebra. * ''Effect monoids'' are the
monoids In abstract algebra, a branch of mathematics, a monoid is a set equipped with an associative binary operation and an identity element. For example, the nonnegative integers with addition form a monoid, the identity element being 0. Monoids ...
in the category of effect algebras. They are effect algebras that have an additional associative unital distributive multiplication operation.


Morphisms

A morphism from an effect algebra E to an effect algebra F is given by a function f:E\rightarrow F such that f(1)=1 and for all a,b\in E :a\perp b implies f(a)\perp f(b) and f(a\oplus b) = f(a)\oplus f(b). It then follows that morphisms preserve the orthosupplements. Equipped with such morphisms, effect algebras form a category which has the following properties: *the category of Boolean algebras is a full subcategory of the category of effect algebras, *every effect algebra is a
colimit In category theory, a branch of mathematics, the abstract notion of a limit captures the essential properties of universal constructions such as products, pullbacks and inverse limits. The dual notion of a colimit generalizes constructions such ...
of finite Boolean algebras.


Positive operator-valued measures

As an example of how effect algebras are used to expess concepts in quantum theory, the definition of a positive operator-valued measure may be cast in terms of effect algebra morphisms as follows. Let \mathcal E(H) be the algebra of effects of a Hilbert space H, and let \Sigma be a ''σ''-algebra. A ''positive operator-valued measure'' (POVM) is an effect algebra morphism \Sigma\rightarrow\mathcal E(H) which preserves joins of countable chains. A POVM is a
projection-valued measure In mathematics, particularly in functional analysis, a projection-valued measure (PVM) is a function defined on certain subsets of a fixed set and whose values are self-adjoint projections on a fixed Hilbert space. Projection-valued measures are ...
precisely when its image is contained in the orthoalgebra of projections on the Hilbert space H.


References


External links

* {{nlab, id=effect+algebra, title=Effect algebra Algebraic structures