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A Bohr topos is a topos associated with any quantum mechanical system, which is such that
are equivalently
the classical observables and classical states, hence its classical probability theory,
internal to the Bohr topos, hence in the internal logic of the Bohr topos.
A detailed motivation/derivation of this from classical theorems on the foundations of standard quantum mechanics is at order-theoretic structure in quantum mechanics.
One might think of a Bohr topos as (part of) a formalization of the “coordination” of the physical theory of quantum mechanics, providing a formalized prescription of how to map the theory to propositions about (experimental) observables of the system. The internal logic of Bohr toposes has been argued (e.g. Heunen-Landsman-Spitters 09) to be a better formal context for such considerations than the old quantum logic going back to von Neumann.
The idea of Bohr toposes goes back to Butterfield-Hamilton-Isham, Isham-Döring 07) and Heunen-Landsman-Spitters 09. The concept is named after Niels Bohr, whose informal ideas about the nature of quantum mechanics (Bohr 1949, cf. Scheibe 1973, p. 24) it is supposed to formalize, see at interpretation of quantum mechanics – Bohr’s standpoint.
Sometimes in the literature the discussion of Bohr toposes is referred to as “the topos-theoretic formulation of physics”. But actually Bohr toposes currently formalize but one aspect of quantum mechanics, namely “the quantum mechanical phase space” in the form of the quantum observables and the quantum states. The plain Bohr topos does not even encode any dynamics, though in the spirit of AQFT a certain presheaf of Bohr toposes on spacetime does encode dynamics (Nuiten 11). For other and more comprehensive usages of topos theory in the formalization of physics see at geometry of physics and at higher category theory and physics.
To every quantum mechanical system is associated its Bohr topos: a ringed topos which plays the role of the quantum phase space. The idea of this construction – Bohrification – is that it naturally captures the geometric and logical aspects of quantum physics in terms of higher geometry/topos theory.
One way to understand Bohrification is as a generalization of the construction of the Gelfand spectrum of commutative C-star algebras to a context of noncommutative -algebras. It assigns to a noncommutative -algebra essentially a system of Gelfand dual spaces to each of its commutative subalgebras. Together, this system yields a generalized Gelfand spectrum in the form of a locale internal to the sheaf topos over the poset of commutative subalgebras of , or equivalently its externalization regarded as a locale over the locale of open subalgebras.
As a topos, the Bohr topos is just a presheaf topos, the topos of presheaves on this poset of commutative subalgebras of , but the point is that it is naturally a ringed topos with the original non-commutative algebra appearing as a commutative -algebra internal to the Bohr topos. This allows to talk about quantum states on much like classical states, but internal to the Bohr topos.
In fact, under mild assumptions on , its poset of commutative subalgebras, and hence the Bohr topos over it, encodes precisely the Jordan algebra underlying . As discussed at Jordan algebra, this is precisely that part of which knows about the quantum observables themselves. In order to have the Bohr topos remember the full non-commutative algebra structure of , it needs to be equipped with the information about Hamiltonian flows induced on by automorphisms of the form , where is the commutator (that gets discarded as one passes to the Jordan algebra). According to Andreas Döring (private communication at MPI Bonn, April 2013), this can be formulated nicely in topos theory.
The formalization of the notion quantum mechanical system (see there for details) with its states and observables is the following.
The system as such is encoded by a C-star algebra ;
a self-adjoint operator is thought of as being an observable of the system: a kind of observation that one can make about it;
a -linear map (which is “positive” and “normalized”) is thought of as being a state that the system can be in – a physical configuration (or rather: a probability distribution of such);
the pairing is thought of as being the value of the observable made on the system in state : for instance the total energy of the system as measured in some chosen unit;
a one-parameter group of automorphisms (inner automorphisms for “localized” systems, see below) is thought of as being an evolution of the system, for instance in time or more general in spacetime.
(Often in the literature quantum mechanical systems are instead dually conceived of in terms of Hilbert spaces of pure states. The relation between these two descriptions is established by the GNS-construction which allows to pass from one to the other.)
Notice that these axioms are naturally thought of as exhibiting the -algebra as a formal dual of the would-be quantum phase space of the physical system – not quite an ordinary topological space (which by Gelfand duality it would be if were commutative) but still a kind of generalized space. Traditionally it is common to regard this as a space in noncommutative geometry. Notice that if we do so – hence if we regard the object that is the incarnation of in the opposite category – then the definition of observable above reduces to the evident notion of real-valued functions on quantum phase space: such a function is a morphism in , which dually is a -algebra homomorphism (where on the left we have the unitization of functions with compact support). That such correspond to self-adjoint operators of is the statement of functional calculus for -algebras.
More subtle is the interpretation of the axiom for states. Historically this had been been subject to some discussion: by the spectral theorem two different observables have a compatible set of observable values if and only if these elements commute with each other in . Generally, a set of observables has a jointly consistent set of observable values if and only if the sub--algebra generated by them is commutative. Therefore for the phenomenological interpretation of the axioms it seems to make no sense to demand that a state be linear on non-commuting observables: if and do not commute, it is not a-priori clear that it makes sense to require that . This might experimentally fail, and hold only for commuting .
Therefore the notion of quasi-state was introduced: a quasi-state on is defined to be a (positive and normalized) function which is required to be -linear only on all commutative subalgebras of . Operationally, quasi-states should be the genuine states!
One would therefore tend to think that the terminology has been chosen in an unfortunate way. While maybe true, it turns out – non-trivially – that in a major class of cases of interest the distinction does not matter: namely Gleason's theorem states that for a separable complex Hilbert space with and the -algebra of bounded operators on , all quasi-states on are automatically states: a function that is linear on all commutative subalgebras is automatically also linear on all of .
While this means that the distinction between states and quasi-states disappears in a major case of interest, it does not disappear in all cases of interest. In particular, other foundational theorems about quantum mechanics concern the collection of commutative subalgebras, too.
Notably, one may wonder about the evident strengthening of the notion of quasi-states to that of a map which is not just linear but also an algebra homomorphism on each commuting subalgebra. Notice that by Gelfand duality every commutative -algebra is the algebra of continuous functions on some topological space . Under this duality a state on is a probability distribution on , while an algebra homomorphism is a point of . Therefore a quasi-state which is commutative-subalgebra-wise an algebra homomorphism may be thought of as encoding a collection of precise numerical values (as opposed to just expectation values) of all possible observables. Such a hypothetical quasi-state is sometimes called a collection of hidden variables of the quantum mechanical system: its existence would mean that despite the apparent probabilistic nature of quantum mechanics, there are “hidden” non-probabilistic states. But there are not. This is the statement of the Kochen-Specker theorem: under precisely the assumptions that make Gleason's theorem work, there is no quasi-state which is commutative-subalgebra-wise an algebra homomorphism.
In summary, this means:
The foundational characteristics of quantum physics are encoded in notions of functions on the algebra of observables which are linear and positive only commutative-subalgebra-wise .
Since the notion of commutative-subalgebra-wise homomorphism is at the heart of quantum physics, it seems worthwhile to consider natural formalizations of this notion. There is indeed a very natural and general abstract one: whenever any notion of function is defined only locally it is natural to consider the sheaf of such functions over all possible local patches.
The historically motivating example, and possibly still the most widely familiar one, is that of holomorphic functions on a complex manifold: there are in general very few holomorphic functions defined over all of a complex manifold, but plenty of them defined over any small enough subset. And it is of fundamental interest to consider the collections of holomorphic functions over each such subset, and how these restrict to each other under restriction of subsets. This collection of local data is a sheaf of functions on the complex manifold.
There is an evident analog setup of this situation that applies in the present case of interest, that of functions defined on commutative subalgebras:
For any C-star algebra, write for the set of all its commutative -subalgebras. This is naturally a poset under inclusion of subalgebras. A (co)presheaf of this set is a functor . Any such functor we may think of as a collection of commutative-subalgebra-wise data on , consistent with restriction of subalgebras. The collection of all such functors – which we write – is a category called a presheaf topos.
Inside this topos, all the above discussion of foundations of quantum mechanics finds a natural simple equivalent reformulation:
First of all, the non-commutative -algebra naturally induces a commutative C-star algebra object internal to : namely the copresheaf defined by the tautological assignment
In words this means nothing but that the collection of all commutative subalgebras of may naturally be regarded as a single commutative -algebra internal to the topos .
Below we shall discuss (here) that in a precise sense this commutative internal captures precisely all the kinematical information encoded in the quantum mechanical system of – everything related to states and observables but not information about (time) evolution. So everything we have discussed so far.
The pair of these two ingredients
constitutes what is called a ringed topos – a special case of the notion of a locally ringed topos. This notion is a fundamental notion for generalized spaces in higher geometry. The most advanced general theory of higher geometry (Lurie09) is based on modelling spaces as ringed toposes.
We shall call this ringed topos the Bohr topos of .
This terminology is meant to indicate that one may think of this construction as formalizing faithfully and usefully a heuristic that has been emphasized by Niels Bohr – one of the founding fathers of quantum mechanics – and is known as the doctrine of classical concepts (Scheibe 1973) in quantum mechanics. This states that nonclassical/noncommutative as the logic/geometry of quantum mechanics may be, it is to be probed and detected by classical/commutative logic/geometry.
Namely in terms of the Bohr topos we have the following equivalent reformulations of the foundational facts about quantum physics discussed above, now internally in .
Consistent quantum mechanical states. A quasi-state on is precisely an ordinary classical state on , internal to .
In particular (Gleason's theorem): if for then a quantum state on the external is precisely a classical state on the internal .
and
Non-existence of hidden quantum variables. The Gelfand spectrum of internal to the Bohr topos has no global point. (Kochen-Specker).
These two statements might be taken as suggesting that a quantum mechanical system is naturally regarded in terms of its Bohr topos – somewhat more naturally than as a -algebra . (The second, in a slightly different setup, was emphasized in IshamHamiltonButterfield, which inspired all of the following discussion, the first in Spitters). In fact, thinking of ringed toposes as generalized spaces in higher geometry, it suggests that the Bohr topos itself is the quantum phase space of the quantum mechanical system in question.
To which extent this perspective is genuinely useful is maybe still to be established. For pointers to the literature see the references below. Discussion along the above lines may suggest that this perspective is indeed useful, but what is probably still missing is a statement about quantum physics that can be formulated and proven in terms of Bohr toposes, while being hardly conceivable or at least more unnatural without. It is probably currently not clear if such statements have been found.
One potential such statement has been suggested in (Nuiten 11) after discussion with Spitters:
In the formalization of quantum field theory by the Haag-Kastler axioms – called AQFT – every quantum field theory is entirely encoded in terms of its local net of observables over spacetime . This is a copresheaf of C-star algebras
which assigns to every open subset of spacetime the quantum subsystem of quantum fields supported in that region. By the above, we may consider for each of these quantum systems their associated quantum phase spaces given by the correspondong Bohr toposes . This yields a presheaf
of ringed toposes whose internal ring object has the structure of a commutative -algebra. With the copresheaf thus turned into a presheaf it is natural to ask under which conditions this is a sheaf: under which conditions this presheaf satisfies descent.
In (Nuiten 11) the following is observed: if satisfies what is called the split property (a strong form of the time slice axiom) then the Bohr-presheaf of quantum phase spaces satisfies spatial descent by local geometric morphisms precisely if the original copresheaf of observables is indeed local – spatially and causally. So this means that a natural property of quantum physics – spatial and causal locality – corresponds from the perspective of Bohr toposes to a natural property of presheaves of quantum phase spaces: descent.
One can probably view this as further suggestive evidence that indeed quantum physics is naturally regarded from the point of view of the Bohr topos. But for seeing where this perspective is headed, it seems that more insights along these lines would be useful.
The discussion below proceeds in the following steps (following (Nuiten 11))
Bohr topos of a quantum mechanics system
This discusses the Bohr topos incarnation of a quantum mechanical system – the topos-theoretic quantum phase space – and its functoriality.
This discusses how the classical kinematics internal to a Bohr topos is the external quantum kinematics of the underlying quantum mechanical system.
(Pre-)Sheaf of Bohr toposes of a quantum field theory
This discusses how the presheaves of Bohr toposes obtained by applying Bohrification to a local net of observables of a quantum field theory.
We discuss the definitions and some basic properties of Bohr toposes: certain ringed toposes – in fact ringed spaces – associated with any (possibly non-commutative) algebra. We formulate the construction for C-star algebras, since this is the standard model for quantum mechanical systems, but actually much of it does not depend on either the topology or the star-algebra structure until we come to the discussion of the kinematics in a Bohr topos below.
A C-star algebra is (…)
For a star-algebra, an element is called a normal element if .
Every element of a -algebra is the sum of two normal elements, because
This means whenever a linear morphism between the vector spaces underlying two -algebras is defined on normal elements, it is already defined on all elements. This will be used in several of the arguments below.
A partial -algebra is a set equipped with
a symmetric and reflexive binary relation ;
elements ;
an involution ;
a function ;
a function ;
(partial) binary operations
such that every set of elements that are pairwise in is contained in a set whose elements are also pairwise in and on which the above operations yield the structure of a commutative C-star algebra.
A homomorphism of partial -algebra is a function preserving this structure. This defines a category of partial algebras.
This appears as (vdBergHeunen, def. 11,12).
For a C-star algebra, write
for its set of normal operators. This is naturally a partial C-star algebra with the set of pairs of elements that commute in .
For a partial C-star algebra write for the poset of total (not partial) commutative sub C-star algebras. We call this the poset of commutative subalgebras.
This construction extends to a functor
to the category Poset of posets: for a homomorphism we let be over any be the image of the restriction of to .
By standard properties of C-star algebras (see here), this image is simply the set-theoretic image .
Notice the following fact about Alexandroff spaces:
The functor
from posets to topological spaces that sends a poset to the topological space whose underlying set is the underlying set of and whose open subsets are the upward closed subsets exhibits an equivalence of categories
of Poset with the full subcategory of Alexandroff spaces.
For we call the Bohr site of .
A morphism in is called commutativity reflecting if for all we have that if commutes with in then already commutes with in .
Write
for the subcategory of C-star algebras on the commutativity-reflecting morphisms.
Every monomorphism in is commutativity reflecting.
A morphism in is commutativity reflecting precisely if the morphism has a right adjoint
This appears as (Nuiten 11, lemma 2.6).
Write
for the subcategories of on the monomorphisms and on the commutativity-reflecting morphisms, respectively.
Write
for the categories of ringed spaces and ringed toposes, where the internal ring object is equipped with the structure of an internal commutative C-star algebra and the morphisms respect the -algebra structure.
Hence a morphism in is
a geometric morphism such that the inverse image is still an internal -algebra in ;
and a morphism of internal -algebras
in .
For the Bohr topos of is the -space/topos
whose underlying topological space is (that corresponding to) the Bohr site, and whose internal -algebra is the tautological copresheaf
in equipped with the evident objectwise commutative -algebra structure.
Moreover, write
for the -topos whose underlying sheaf topos is that for the double negation topology on the plain Bohr topos.
The general notion of morphisms between toposes are geometric morphisms. But those that remember the morphisms of Bohr sites are essential geometric morphisms.
Every functor induces an essential geometric morphism
where and are left and right Kan extension along , respectively.
We also write for this. Notice that by the equivalence of copresheaves on posets and sheaves on the corresponding Alexandroff locales (see there for details) this is equivalently
The next proposition asserts that all essential geometric morphisms between Bohr toposes arise this way:
The 2-functor
is a full and faithful 2-functor.
Analogously, essential geometric morphisms of the underlying toposes are precisely those in image under the functor of functors .
By the discussion in the section In terms of essential geometric morphisms at Cauchy complete category we have a full and faithful embedding of Cauchy-complete catgeories . But posets are trivially Cauchy, complete, hence this restricts to an embedding .
In terms of Alexandroff topologies: by the discussion of Alexandroff locales (in the entry Alexandroff space) we have that the functor takes values precisely on those morphisms of locales whose inverse image has a left adjoint. The statement then follows using the properties of localic reflection, which says that the 2-functor is a full and faithful 2-functor.
For such essential geometric morphisms to be parts of morphisms in , def. we need that their inverse images respect internal -algebras:
For an essential geometric morphism, the inverse image is naturally a -algebra in .
According to (HLS09, 4.8) every functor is an -algebra internal to . Here is such a functor, sending .
Using this we now discuss morphisms of Bohr toposes in .
The construction of Bohr toposes from def. extends to a functor of the form
with the special property that any is sent to
an essential geometric morphisms with an extra right adjoint
such that the corresponding internal homomorphism of internal algebras is an epimorphism.
This is (Nuiten 11, lemma 2.7). (Essentially this argument also appears as (vdBergHeunen, prop. 33), where however the extra right adjoint is not made use of and instead the variances of the morphisms involved in the definition of are redefined in order to make the statement come out.)
To a morphism in which by prop. corresponds to an adjoint pair
we assign the essential geometric morphism
(wher and denote left and right Kan extension, respectively) equipped with the morphism of internal -algebras
which over is the restriction of to and corestriction to
(to the -completion of the algebraic image of ).
Using prop. the above prop. has the following partial converse.
For , morphisms in for which
the underlying geometric morphism has an extra right adjoint
the morphism of internal algebras is an epimorphism
are in bijection with functions
that are homomorphisms on all commutative subalgebras and reflect commutativity.
In particular when is already commutative, morphisms with an extra right adjoint and epi ring homomorphism are in bijection with algebra homomorphisms .
By prop every essential geometric morphism comes from a morphism of locales , which by the discussion at Alexandroff space is equivalently a morphism of posets . By the assumption of the extra right adjoint we also have a geometric morphism the other way round, and hence, again by prop. , an adjoint pair
that induces functors between toposes as in prop. . Then the fact that is a morphism of -toposes implies algebra homomorphisms
natural in .
By the assumption that this are the components of an epimorphism of copresheaves all these component morphisms are themselves epimorphisms and hence we have that indeed .
A key aspect of the Bohr topos of a quantum mechanical system (as defined above) is that that classical kinematics and classical probability theory of the commutative internal -algebra is the quantum kinematics and quantum probability theory of .
In fact, the very definition of provides a formal context in which Gleason's theorem has a natural formulation:
(Gleason’s theorem)
For a Hilbert space of dimension , and its algebra of bounded operators, a state on is a function
which is a -linear map when restricted to each commutative subalgebra .
A function that preserves certain structure locally – here: over each commutative subalgebra – is precisely an internal fully structure preserving homomorphism in the presheaf topos over these local objects – here: over commutative subalgebras. Hence we have the following direct topos-theoretic equivalent reformulation of Gleason’s theorem.
For as above, we have a natural bijection between the quantum states on and the (classical) states of internal to .
The idea is that for , the Bohr topos is the corresponding quantum phase space. More precisely, we may think of the internal commutative -algebra as the formal dual to the quantum phase space.
The following discussion makes this precise by exhibiting this formal dual as an internal locale. Since is a spatial topos, this internal locale is in fact an ordinary topological space bundle over the Alexandroff space .
Write and , respectively for the corresponding internal locales associated to by internal constructive Gelfand duality. Write
and
for the corresponding external locale, given under the equivalence of categories
discussed at internal locale.
For a (noncommutative) C-star algebra, the assignment
or
is called the Bohrification of .
Let be the internal locale from def. .
Regarded as an object
of external locales over , this is the topological space whose underlying set is given by the disjoint union
over all commutative -subalgebras of of the ordinary Gelfand spectra of these commutative -algebras, and whose open subsets are defined to be those for which
for all commutative subalgebras ;
For all , if and such that , then .
Regarded equivalently as an internal locale in this
As a presheaf on the poset this is given by
where for we set
with the relative topology inherited from .
This appears as (HLSW, theorem 1).
The Bohrification of only depends on its partial C-star algebra of normal elements
This is highlighted in (vdBergHeunen).
For a commutative -algebra and Loc its ordinary Gelfand spectrum, we have that Bohrification in the double negation topology reproduces this ordinary Gelfand spectrum:
This is (Spitters06, theorem 9, corollary 10).
Then the construction of the ringed topos over the poset of commutative subalgebras
extends to a functor
where on the right the morphisms of internal rings are even morphisms of internal C* algebras.
With the components of the morphism of internal rings the evident objectwise inclusions, this is directly checked.
Let be the category of C-star algebras and inclusions. Then Bohrification extends to a functor
This is effectively the functoriality of the internal constructive Gelfand duality applied to the above observation. The statement appears as (vdBergHeunen, theorem 35).
For a C*-algebra, then in quantum physics a self-adjoint operator is a quantum observable. The following statement asserts that quantum observables on are in a precise sense the -valued “functions” on the Bohr topos of .
Write for the -algebra of continuous complex functions on the real line. We think of as the incarnation of in the context of Bohr toposes.
Morphisms with an extra right adjoint and epi are in bijection to the observables on .
By prop. such morphisms are in bijection to algebra homomorphisms
By functional calculus: every self-adjoint operator provides such a homomorphism by . Conversely, given such an algebra homomorphism, its image of is a self-adjoint operator in , and these two constructions are clearly inverses of each other.
In the different but related context of the spectral presheaf (Isham-Döring 07) the identification of quantum observables with a topos-theoretic construction, as far as possible, has been called “daseinisation”. This is a bit more involved than the above direct characterization in terms of maps of ringed toposes.
Let be an observable and write for the subalgebra generated by it. Then (by general properties of presheaf over-toposes) the slice topos is equivalent to
where on the right we have the copresheaves over the under-category . This is precisely the sub-poset of commutative subalgebras on those commutative subalgebras that contain . This means that a classically consistent observation in the slice topos is one that is consistent with the observation of .
For write for the ringed topos as indicated, where denotes the copresheaf constant on .
The internal -algebra is an internal -module. Forgetting the algebra structure and only remembering the -module structure, we get a category of “-module toposes”.
There is a canonical morphism of ringed toposes
whose underlying geometric morphism is the identity (and whose morphism of internal ring objects is the unique one).
A state on is a section of in the category of -moduled toposes that is positive and normalized.
(…)
Notice that in the context of AQFT a quantum field theory is encoded by a local net of C-star algebras on spacetime.
Let be a Lorentzian manifold and
be a local net of algebras. Notice that by definition this indeed takes values in -algebras and inclusions . Then postcomposition with the Bohr topos-functor yields a presheaf of ringed spaces
This appears as (Nuiten 11, def. 17).
Assume that a net of observables satisfies the split property. Then it is precisely if the corresponding presheaf of Bohr toposes satisfies spatial descent by local geometric morphisms (meaning that for every spatial hyperslice the induced presheaf satisfies descent by local geometric morphisms.)
(…)
This appears as (Nuiten 11, theorem 4.2).
Above is discussed the notion of Bohr topos given by covariant functors on the poset of commutative subalgebras of a C*-algebra. The fact that the functors here are covariant is related to the fact that the algebra itself naturally exists inside the presheaf topos.
Alternatively one can explore the situation for contravariant functors on the poset of commutative subalgebras (Isham-Döring 07). The resulting presheaf topos then does not directly contain the given -algebra, but by Gelfand duality, does directly contain an internal locale which is its Gelfand spectrum. This is called the “spectral presheaf”.
The assertion by Bohr that all experiments in quantum mechanics must be possible to describe in “classical terms” is in
Niels Bohr, Discussion with Einstein on Epistemological Problems in Atomic Physics, in: P. A. Schilpp (ed.) Albert Einstein, Philosopher-Scientist (Evanston: Library of Living Philosophers) (1949) 201-241 [doi:10.1016/S1876-0503(08)70379-7]
“however far the phenomena transcend the scope of classical physical explanation, the account of all evidence must be expressed in classical terms.”
Niels Bohr‘s views on quantum mechanics that give the construction of Bohrification its name are reviewed further in
For more see at interpretation of quantum mechanics the section Bohr’s standpoint.
Maybe the first article to propose to use intuitionistic logic/topos theory for the description of quantum physics is
The term Bohrification and the investigations associated with it were initiated in
see also related comments in disucssion of the Born rule here:
See also:
The computation of the internal Gelfand spectrum was initiated in
with some results in section 5 and 6 of
and completed in
An outline of the full proof is given in
Applications and examples for a matrix algebra are discussed in
The functoriality of Bohrification is observed in
The application of the double negation topology to make Bohrification coincide with ordinary Gelfand duality on commutative -algebras is discussed in
The generalization of Bohrification from quantum mechanics to quantum field theory (AQFT):
Review:
The original suggestion to interpret the Kochen-Specker theorem in the topos over the poset of commutative subalgebras (there taken to be presheaves instead of copresheaves) is due to
Jeremy Butterfield, John Hamilton, Chris Isham, A topos perspective on the Kochen-Specker theorem, I. quantum states as generalized valuations, Internat. J. Theoret. Phys. 37 11 (1998) 2669-2733 [doi:10.1023/A:1026680806775, arXiv:quant-ph/9803055, MR2000c:81027]
II. conceptual aspects and classical analogues Int. J. of Theor. Phys. 38 3 (1999) 827-859 [MR2000f:81012, doi:10.1023/A:1026652817988]
III. Von Neumann algebras as the base category, Int. J. of Theor. Phys. 39 6 (2000) 1413-1436 [arXiv:quant-ph/9911020, MR2001k:81016,doi:10.1023/A:1003667607842]
IV. Interval valuations, Internat. J. Theoret. Phys. 41 4 (2002) 613-639 [MR2003g:81009, doi]
with some review and outlook in
and then
Andreas Döring, Chris Isham, A Topos Foundation for Theories of Physics
I. Formal Languages for Physics, J. Math. Phys. 49 (2008) 053515 [arXiv:quant-ph/0703060, doi:10.1063/1.2883740]
II. Daseinisation and the Liberation of Quantum Theory, J. Math. Phys. 49 (2008) 053516 [arXiv:quant-ph/0703062, doi:10.1063/1.2883742]
III. The Representation of Physical Quantities With Arrows, J. Math. Phys. 49 (2008) 053517 [arXiv:quant-ph/0703064, doi:10.1063/1.2883777]
IV. Categories of Systems, J. Math. Phys. 49 (2008) 053518 [arXiv:quant-ph/0703066, doi:10.1063/1.2883826]
Further development in:
Discussion of aspects of the process of quantization in terms of Bohr toposes is in
A variant of the Bohr topos construction meant to take more of the topology of the underlying -algebra into account has been suggested for finite-dimensional -algebra in
and generalized to arbitrary -algebras in
Last revised on November 19, 2023 at 11:22:54. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.