Abstract

What does it take for real-deterministic $c$-valued (i.e., classical, commuting) variables to comply with the Heisenberg uncertainty principle? Here, we construct a class of real-deterministic $c$-valued variables out of the weak values obtained via a nonperturbing weak measurement of quantum operators with a postselection over a complete set of state vectors basis, which always satisfies the Kennard-Robertson-Schr\"odinger uncertainty relation. First, we introduce an auxiliary global random variable and couple it to the imaginary part of the weak value to convert the incompatibility between the quantum operator and the basis into the fluctuation of an ``error term,'' and then superimpose it onto the real part of the weak value. We show that this class of ``$c$-valued physical quantities'' provides a real-deterministic contextual hidden-variable model for the quantum expectation value of a certain class of operators. We then show that the Schr\"odinger and the Kennard-Robertson lower bounds can be obtained separately by imposing the classical uncertainty relation to the $c$-valued physical quantities associated with a pair of Hermitian operators. Within the representation, the complementarity between two incompatible quantum observables manifests the absence of a basis wherein the error terms of the associated two $c$-valued physical quantities simultaneously vanish. Furthermore, quantum uncertainty principle is captured by a specific irreducible epistemic restriction between the two $c$-valued physical quantities, foreign in classical mechanics, constraining the allowed form of their joint distribution. We then suggest an epistemic interpretation of the two terms decomposing the $c$-valued physical quantity as the optimal estimate under the epistemic restriction and the associated estimation error, and discuss the classical limit.

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