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Redundant imprinting of information in nonideal environments: Objective reality via a noisy channel

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TLDR
The results demonstrate that Quantum Darwinism is robust with respect to nonideal initial states of the environment: the environment almost always acquires redundant information about the system but its rate of acquisition can be reduced.
Abstract
Quantum Darwinism provides an information-theoretic framework for the emergence of the objective, classical world from the quantum substrate. The key to this emergence is the proliferation of redundant information throughout the environment where observers can then intercept it. We study this process for a purely decohering interaction when the environment, $\mathcal{E}$, is in a nonideal (e.g., mixed) initial state. In the case of good decoherence, that is, after the pointer states have been unambiguously selected, the mutual information between the system, $\mathcal{S}$, and an environment fragment, $\mathcal{F}$, is given solely by $\mathcal{F}$'s entropy increase. This demonstrates that the environment's capacity for recording the state of $\mathcal{S}$ is directly related to its ability to increase its entropy. Environments that remain nearly invariant under the interaction with $\mathcal{S}$, either because they have a large initial entropy or a misaligned initial state, therefore have a diminished ability to acquire information. To elucidate the concept of good decoherence, we show that, when decoherence is not complete, the deviation of the mutual information from $\mathcal{F}$'s entropy change is quantified by the quantum discord, i.e., the excess mutual information between $\mathcal{S}$ and $\mathcal{F}$ is information regarding the initial coherence between pointer states of $\mathcal{S}$. In addition to illustrating these results with a single-qubit system interacting with a multiqubit environment, we find scaling relations for the redundancy of information acquired by the environment that display a universal behavior independent of the initial state of $\mathcal{S}$. Our results demonstrate that Quantum Darwinism is robust with respect to nonideal initial states of the environment: the environment almost always acquires redundant information about the system but its rate of acquisition can be reduced.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The classical-quantum boundary for correlations: Discord and related measures

TL;DR: Different methods for quantifying the quantum and classical parts of correlations are among the more actively studied topics of quantum-information theory over the past decade as mentioned in this paper and different notions of classical and quantum correlations quantified by quantum discord and other related measures are reviewed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Generic emergence of classical features in quantum Darwinism

TL;DR: It is proved that the emergence of classical features along the lines of quantum Darwinism is a general feature of any quantum dynamics: observers who acquire information indirectly through the environment have effective access at most to classical information about one and the same measurement of the quantum system.
Journal ArticleDOI

Quantum origins of objectivity

TL;DR: In this article, a basic structure within quantum mechanics that leads to the perceived objectivity is a so-called spectrum broadcast structure, based on minimal assumptions, without referring to any dynamical details or a concrete model.
Journal ArticleDOI

Tight lower bound to the geometric measure of quantum discord

TL;DR: In this article, the authors obtained a rigorous lower bound to the geometric measure of quantum discord in a general bipartite state which dominates that obtained by Luo and Fu and established a generic form of this geometric measure.
Journal ArticleDOI

Quantum Darwinism, Classical Reality, and the Randomness of Quantum Jumps

Wojciech H. Zurek
- 30 Sep 2014 - 
TL;DR: The core principles that underlie quantum weirdness also explain why only selected quantum states survive monitoring by the environment and, as a result, why we experience our world as classical as mentioned in this paper.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Decoherence, einselection, and the quantum origins of the classical

TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that many of the symptoms of classicality can be induced in quantum systems by their environments, which leads to environment-induced superselection or einselection, a quantum process associated with selective loss of information.
Journal ArticleDOI

Quantum discord: a measure of the quantumness of correlations.

TL;DR: This work shows that absence of entanglement does not imply classicality, and considers the vanishing of discord as a criterion for the preferred effectively classical states of a system, i.e., the pointer states.
Journal ArticleDOI

Can Quantum-Mechanical Description of Physical Reality be Considered Complete?

TL;DR: In this article, it is shown that a certain "criterion of physical reality" formulated in a recent article with the above title by A. Einstein, B. Podolsky and N. Rosen contains an essential ambiguity when it is applied to quantum phenomena.
Journal ArticleDOI

Classical, quantum and total correlations

TL;DR: In this paper, the problem of separating consistently the total correlations in a bipartite quantum state into a quantum and a purely classical part is discussed, and a measure of classical correlations is proposed and its properties are explored.
Book

Decoherence and the Appearance of a Classical World in Quantum Theory

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present basic concepts and their interpretation, including Decoherence through Interaction with the Environment, consistent history and decoherence in Quantum Field Theory and Quantum Gravity.
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