1410 7277v1 PDF
1410 7277v1 PDF
1410 7277v1 PDF
mechanics
John Alexander Cruz Morales∗
Instituto Nacional de Matemática Pura e Aplicada, IMPA.
Estrada Dona Castorina 110. Rio de Janeiro, 22460-320, Brasil.
Boris Zilber†
Mathematical Institute.
University of Oxford.
24-29 St Giles. Oxford, OX1 3LB, United Kingdom.
August 24 2014
Abstract
In this paper we will present an ongoing project which aims to
use model theory as a suitable mathematical setting for studying the
formalism of quantum mechanics. We will argue that this approach
provides a geometric semantics for such formalism by means of es-
tablishing a (non-commutative) duality between certain algebraic and
geometric objects.
1 Introduction
The idea of using model theory as a mathematical framework for providing
rigorous and solid foundations for (quantum) physics comes from the paper
[8] and later preprints of the second author. During these years some of
the ideas in that work have maturated in the yet unpublished paper [11].
We give here an account of the current status of this work and trace some
ideas for future developments. In particular, in this paper, we will focus on
the formalism of quantum mechanics and will describe how to construct a
geometric semantics for it by means of using model-theoretic tools. In fact,
∗
e-mail: alekosandro@gmail.com, jacruzm@impa.br
†
e-mail: zilber@maths.ox.ac.uk
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this project is a part of a much broader one which aims to find in a system-
atic way a geometric counterpart VA for a given non-commutative algebra
A (which should be understood as a ‘coordinate algebra’ in the sense of
non-commutative geometry). Here “geometric” should also be understood
in some broad but well-defined sense.
Model theory has worked out a very efficient hierarchy of type of struc-
tures (stability theory) and, in particular, an important class of structures
was introduced by Hrushovski and the second author [4] in order to identify
and characterise logically perfect structures, i.e., the top level of the stabil-
ity hierarchy. These structures are called Zariski geometries and their links
with non-commutative geometry and quantum physics is an essential part of
the present paper via a (non-commutative) extension of the classical duality
between algebraic and geometric objects. This duality may be reinterpreted
in terms of the duality syntax/semantics and this is an idea we will have in
mind in this paper.
From a mathematical point of view the main idea of our project consists
in establishing a rigorous duality
AV ←→ VA
Here VA is a multi-sorted structure, each sort of which is a Zariski ge-
ometry (a notion to be defined in section 2). An essential part of the multi-
sorted structure VA are morphisms between sorts functorially agreeing with
embeddings between certain sublagebras of A, which makes the left-to-right
arrow a functor between a category of those subalgebras A and sorts VA
of VA . This functor, in fact, defines a quite rich sheaf over the category
of subalgebras. This makes an interesting point of contact of our approach
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with the topos-theoretic approach to foundations of physics suggested by C.
Isham and J. Butterfield and developed by C. Isham, A. Döring and others,
see [2]. In this approach VA is supposed to be a topos.
From [8] we have the duality between rational Weyl algebras A and corre-
sponding (quantum) Zariski geometries VA . The structure VA encapsulates
the representation theory of A. In [11] these ideas are used to extend the du-
ality on algebras A approximated by rational Weyl algebras. This requires
to develop a notion of approximation on the side of structures VA which is
also done there. In this paper we are going to summarize the constructions
in the referred paper and discuss their relevance for physics. More precisely,
it will be shown that those constructions yield that quantum mechanics is
represented in the limit of one particular module (called principal). This
limit structure is called the space of states.
Some words about the organization of the paper are in order. In section
2 we give a brief summary on Zariski geometries for the convenience of the
reader. In sections 3 and 4 we review some of the results in [11] on rational
Weyl algebras,algebraic Hilbert spaces and the structural approximation
procedure which are relevant for the physical point of view. We will mention
the sort of computations and physical problems that can be tackled by the
using the theoretical tools described in these sections. Finally, in section 5
we discuss some open questions and further developments.
2 Zariski geometries
Zariski geometries were introduced in [4] as a generalization of Zariski topolo-
gies, a well known concept in algebraic geometry, in order to study the hi-
erarchy of stable structures by introducing a topological ingredient in logic.
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following terms: An open irreducible set U is said to be presmooth if, for
any irreducible relatively closed subsets S1 , S2 ⊂ U , and any irreducible
component S0 of the intersection S1 ∩ S2 we have that
In other words, the theorem referred above asserts that in the one di-
mensional case a non-linear Zariski geometry is almost an algebraic curve.
We want to note that the adverb almost is really relevant, since examples
of non-classical Zariski geometries (in the sense that they are not defin-
able in algebraically closed field) are known, see [9]. The links with non-
commutative geometry arise in the study of these non-classical geometries.
M 7→ MR
which “cuts out” the real part of the structure M. E.g. for the commutative
algebra over C generated by two invertible elements X and Y the associated
geometry M is just the complex algebraic variety C× × C× (the complex
algebraic 2-torus), while MR is S 1 × S 1 , the square of the unit circle S 1 .
An interesting example of a non-commutative M with a discrete real part
is discussed in [6].
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These are the main lessons that one may learn from the study of non-
classical Zariski geometries which are part of the core of this paper:
QP − P Q = i~.
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U a = exp iaQ, V b = exp ibP
for a, b ∈ R. These are unitary (and so bounded) operators if P and Q are
self-adjoint, and the following commutation relation holds:
U a V b = qV b U a
where q = exp iab~.
A(a, b) = C[U ±a , V ±b ]
is called (in this paper) a Weyl algebra. Now, one can say that A can be
fully replaced by the entirety of its Weyl subalgebras A(a, b) which have a
good Hilbert space representation theory.
~
By rescaling we may assume that 2π is a rational number. Now when
a, b are rational numbers, the corresponding Weyl algebras have very nice
finite-dimensional representations since the multipliers q = eiab~ are roots of
unity (of order N = N (a, b), the denominator of the rational number ab~ 2π .)
These quantum algebras at roots of unity and their representation theory
are very well understood (see e.g [1]), we call them rational Weyl alge-
bras. A crucial idea of [11] is that in the same way that rational points
approximate points of the real line we should have that rational Weyl alge-
bras approximate the full Heisenberg-Weyl algebra. We will make this idea
more precise below.
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finite group ΓA of symmetries corresponding to the Galois symmetries of
roots of unity of order N, so we associate to α a finite family of bases
u(α). The important point is that a choice of a basis u(α) allows us to
introduce the unique inner product in VA (α) with respect to which u(α) is
an orthonormal basis. A change to another canonical basis does not effect
inner product since the transformations of ΓA are given by unitary matrices.
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A
αi αj αk
Spec(Z(A))
Figure 1
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duality
A ←→ VA
between quantum algebras A at roots of unity (rational Weyl algebras in our
case) and corresponding Zariski geometries VA , which extends the classical
duality between commutative affine algebras and affine algebraic varieties.
The new step implemented in [11] is to extend the duality on algebras ap-
proximated by rational Weyl algebras. In order to do that we need to extend
the categories Af in and Vf in by adding some limit objects.
VA (1)
Spec(Z(A)) = {1}
Figure 2
Comparing with figure 1 we can say that Spec(Z(A)) goes down to {1}
as A goes up to the universal object A. The collapse of Spec(Z(A)) is com-
pensated by the blow-up of VA (1) to an infinite dimensional vector space.
However, the full structure on VA (1) is more involved and its construction
via a limit procedure called the structural approximation (see [10]) is a ma-
jor result of the work.
Note that the object A does not belong to Af in and our first aim is to
approximate it by an object à which in a naive sense is a limit of objects of
Af in .
We will start with the family Af in of all rational Weyl algebras and
the Fréchet filter D with respect to the partial ordering, that is for each
A the set {B ∈ Af in : B ⊂ A} is in D. Define à to be the ultraproduct
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of the algebras A in Af in modulo the ultrafilter D. One can identify this
1 1
à as being “pseudo-finitely generated” by a pair of operators U µ and V ν ,
for non-standard integers µ and ν. By construction the integers µ and ν
have a property of being divisible by all standard integers. This property
is equivalent to the fact that à is an upper bound for Af in , i.e. A ⊂ à for
any rational A. Now, we take the corresponding ultraproduct modulo D of
Zariski geometries VA (1) and denote it VÃ (1).
The full limit structure VA (1) is the image of VÃ (1) by a homomorphism
named lim,
U a − U −a V b − V −b
Q := and P := .
2ia 2ib
These are inter-definable with U a and V b in each VA(a,b) (by formulae de-
pending on the rational parameters a and b), but the advantage of using Q
and P for basic symbols is that these make sense everywhere in Af in as well
as in VÃ (1) and VA (1). This, we believe, what makes the true difference
between observables and the other operators and relations in the suggested
interpretation of quantum mechanics.
It is important to note that the a and b in our definition of P and Q
become infinitesimals in à and thus the limit values of the expressions give
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us limit elements of A satisfying the canonical commutation relation.
It turns out that the properties and the invariants of VÃ (1) and the
limit object VA (1) depend essentially on the ratio h = µν . It is convenient
to assume that h is a rational number or, more generally, that h is a non-
standard finite rational number (so then hν is infinitesimal).
In terms of physics the main object VA (1R ) (or rather a certain collec-
tion of norm 1 elements of it) can be thought of as the space of states.
This space is a substitute for the Hilbert space of states of quantum me-
chanics (corresponding to the continuous limit version of universe). On the
other hand, the corresponding set of states of VÃ (1) is pseudo-finite (i.e. its
size is a non-standard integer) and can be thought of as the actual “huge
finite universe” while the space of states of VA (1R ) is only its “observable
image”.
2. Calculate in VÃ (1) using, for example, the Gauss quadratic sums
formula.
3. Apply lim and check that the result in terms of the standard real
numbers is well-defined.
QP − PQ = i~;
H
• the Feynman propagator hx|e−i ~ t yi is well-defined and coincides with
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P2
the well-known formulae for H = 2 (free particle Hamiltonian) and
2 2
H = P +Q2 (harmonic oscillator);
P2 +Q2
• for H = 2 , Z
H 1
hx|e−i ~ t xidx = ,
R i sin 2t
the trace of the time evolution operator for the Harmonic oscillator
formula.
• How does the structure VÃ depend on the choice of the Fréchet ultra-
filter D?
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VA (1R ), and the “huge finite universe” one, VÃ (1). While in the first mea-
surements are in terms of the field of real numbers R, the second is based
on Z̃/(µ), the ring of non-standard integers modulo an infinite non-standard
number µ described above. The latter object familiar to model-theorists ex-
hibits many number-theoretic properties akin to the properties of standard
integers, but is in many ways different.
The study of Z̃/(µ) in the context of the suggested semantics might shed
a light on a series of intriguing connections between number theoretic and
physics phenomena discussed e.g. in [5].
References
[1] K.Brown and K.Goodearl. Lectures on algebraic quantum groups,
Birkhauser, 2002.
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[10] B. Zilber. Perfect infinities and finite approximation, In: Infinity
and Truth. IMS Lecture Notes Series, V.25, 2014.
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