Blake C. Stacey
University of Massachusetts Boston
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Featured researches published by Blake C. Stacey.
arXiv: Quantum Physics | 2017
Christopher A. Fuchs; Michael C. Hoang; Blake C. Stacey
Recent years have seen significant advances in the study of symmetric informationally complete (SIC) quantum measurements, also known as maximal sets of complex equiangular lines. Previously, the published record contained solutions up to dimension 67, and was with high confidence complete up through dimension 50. Computer calculations have now furnished solutions in all dimensions up to 151, and in several cases beyond that, as large as dimension 844. These new solutions exhibit an additional type of symmetry beyond the basic definition of a SIC, and so verify a conjecture of Zauner in many new cases. The solutions in dimensions 68 through 121 were obtained by Andrew Scott, and his catalogue of distinct solutions is, with high confidence, complete up to dimension 90. Additional results in dimensions 122 through 151 were calculated by the authors using Scott’s code. We recap the history of the problem, outline how the numerical searches were done, and pose some conjectures on how the search technique could be improved. In order to facilitate communication across disciplinary boundaries, we also present a comprehensive bibliography of SIC research.
European Physical Journal D | 2017
Marcus Appleby; Christopher A. Fuchs; Blake C. Stacey; Huangjun Zhu
Abstract We reconstruct quantum theory starting from the premise that, as Asher Peres remarked, “Unperformed experiments have no results.” The tools of quantum information theory, and in particular the symmetric informationally complete (SIC) measurements, provide a concise expression of how exactly Peres’s dictum holds true. That expression is a constraint on how the probability distributions for outcomes of different, hypothetical and mutually exclusive experiments ought to mesh together, a type of constraint not foreseen in classical thinking. Taking this as our foundational principle, we show how to reconstruct the formalism of quantum theory in finite-dimensional Hilbert spaces. The central variety of mathematical entity in our reconstruction is the qplex, a very particular type of subset of a probability simplex. Along the way, by closely studying the symmetry properties of qplexes, we derive a condition for the existence of a d-dimensional SIC. Graphical abstract
Foundations of Physics | 2017
Blake C. Stacey
Symmetric informationally complete quantum measurements, or SICs, are mathematically intriguing structures, which in practice have turned out to exhibit even more symmetry than their definition requires. Recently, Zhu classified all the SICs whose symmetry groups act doubly transitively. I show that lattices of integers in the complex numbers, the quaternions and the octonions yield the key parts of these symmetry groups.
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A | 2016
Blake C. Stacey
Wikipedia has claimed for over 3 years now that John von Neumann was the ‘first quantum Bayesian’. In context, this reads as stating that von Neumann inaugurated QBism, the approach to quantum theory promoted by Fuchs, Mermin and Schack. This essay explores how such a claim is, historically speaking, unsupported.
arXiv: Quantum Physics | 2016
Blake C. Stacey
arXiv: Quantum Physics | 2014
Christopher A. Fuchs; Maximilian Schlosshauer; Blake C. Stacey
arXiv: Quantum Physics | 2016
Christopher A. Fuchs; Blake C. Stacey
arXiv: Quantum Physics | 2016
Blake C. Stacey
arXiv: Quantum Physics | 2018
Blake C. Stacey
arXiv: Quantum Physics | 2018
John B. DeBrota; Christopher A. Fuchs; Blake C. Stacey