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Main Authors: Nagasawa, Teruaki, Kato, Kohtaro, Wakakuwa, Eyuri, Buscemi, Francesco
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2404.11985
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author Nagasawa, Teruaki
Kato, Kohtaro
Wakakuwa, Eyuri
Buscemi, Francesco
author_facet Nagasawa, Teruaki
Kato, Kohtaro
Wakakuwa, Eyuri
Buscemi, Francesco
contents Observational entropy -- a quantity that unifies Boltzmann's entropy, Gibbs' entropy, von Neumann's macroscopic entropy, and the diagonal entropy -- has recently been argued to play a key role in a modern formulation of statistical mechanics. Here, relying on algebraic techniques taken from Petz's theory of statistical sufficiency and on a Lévy-type concentration bound, we prove rigorous theorems showing how the observational entropy of a system undergoing a unitary evolution chosen at random tends to increase with overwhelming probability and to reach its maximum very quickly. More precisely, we show that for any observation that is sufficiently coarse with respect to the size of the system, regardless of the initial state of the system (be it pure or mixed), random evolution renders its state practically indistinguishable from the uniform (i.e., maximally mixed) distribution with a probability approaching one as the size of the system grows. The same conclusion holds not only for random evolutions sampled according to the unitarily invariant Haar distribution, but also for approximate 2-designs, which are thought to provide a more physically and computationally reasonable model of random evolutions.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2404_11985
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle On the generic increase of observational entropy in isolated systems
Nagasawa, Teruaki
Kato, Kohtaro
Wakakuwa, Eyuri
Buscemi, Francesco
Quantum Physics
Statistical Mechanics
Observational entropy -- a quantity that unifies Boltzmann's entropy, Gibbs' entropy, von Neumann's macroscopic entropy, and the diagonal entropy -- has recently been argued to play a key role in a modern formulation of statistical mechanics. Here, relying on algebraic techniques taken from Petz's theory of statistical sufficiency and on a Lévy-type concentration bound, we prove rigorous theorems showing how the observational entropy of a system undergoing a unitary evolution chosen at random tends to increase with overwhelming probability and to reach its maximum very quickly. More precisely, we show that for any observation that is sufficiently coarse with respect to the size of the system, regardless of the initial state of the system (be it pure or mixed), random evolution renders its state practically indistinguishable from the uniform (i.e., maximally mixed) distribution with a probability approaching one as the size of the system grows. The same conclusion holds not only for random evolutions sampled according to the unitarily invariant Haar distribution, but also for approximate 2-designs, which are thought to provide a more physically and computationally reasonable model of random evolutions.
title On the generic increase of observational entropy in isolated systems
topic Quantum Physics
Statistical Mechanics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2404.11985