Abstract

Process tomography, the experimental characterization of physical processes, is a central task in science and engineering. Here, we investigate the axiomatic requirements that guarantee the in-principle feasibility of process tomography in general physical theories. Specifically, we explore the requirement that process tomography should be achievable with a finite number of auxiliary systems and with a finite number of input states. We show that this requirement is satisfied in every theory equipped with universal extensions, that is, correlated states from which all other correlations can be generated locally with non-zero probability. We show that universal extensions are guaranteed to exist in two cases: (1) theories permitting conclusive state teleportation, and (2) theories satisfying three properties of Causality, Pure Product States, and Purification. In case (2), the existence of universal extensions follows from a symmetry property of Purification, whereby all pure bipartite states with the same marginal on one system are locally interconvertible. Crucially, our results hold even in theories that do not satisfy Local Tomography, the property that the state of any composite system can be identified from the correlations of local measurements. Summarizing, the existence of universal extensions, without any additional requirement of Local Tomography, is a sufficient guarantee for the characterizability of physical processes using a finite number of auxiliary systems and with a finite number of input systems.

Highlights

  • The experimental characterization of physical processes is an important component of the scientific method

  • We analyzed the task of process tomography in general physical theories, exploring the requirement that physical processes should be identifiable by their action on a finite set of auxiliary systems/a finite set of input states

  • The existence of dynamically faithful states is a broader condition than the usual principle of Local Tomography, and is satisfied in a number of variants of quantum theory, including quantum theory on real Hilbert spaces and a Fermionic version of quantum theory [70,71]

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Summary

Introduction

The experimental characterization of physical processes is an important component of the scientific method. Such a characterization, known as process tomography, is widely adopted in classical [1] and quantum technologies [2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14]. We will explore the conditions that guarantee the feasibility of process tomography in general physical theories, independently of the quantum axiomatization problem. Our goal will be to identify physical conditions that guarantee the achievability of process tomography using a finite number of auxiliary systems and a finite number of input states

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