Finite geometry behind the Harvey-Chryssanthacopoulos four-qubit magic
rectangle
(pp1011-1016)
Metod
Saniga and Michel Planat
doi:
https://doi.org/10.26421/QIC12.11-12-8
Abstracts:
A “magic rectangle” of eleven observables of four qubits, employed by
Harvey and Chryssanthacopoulos (2008) to prove the Bell-Kochen-Specker
theorem in a 16-dimensional Hilbert space, is given a neat
finite-geometrical reinterpretation in terms of the structure of the
symplectic polar space W(7, 2) of the real four-qubit Pauli group. Each
of the four sets of observables of cardinality five represents an
elliptic quadric in the threedimensional projective space of order two
(PG(3, 2)) it spans, whereas the remaining set of cardinality four
corresponds to an affine plane of order two. The four ambient PG(3, 2)s
of the quadrics intersect pairwise in a line, the resulting six lines
meeting in a point. Projecting the whole configuration from this
distinguished point (observable) one gets another, complementary “magic
rectangle” of the same qualitative structure.
Key words:
Bell-Kochen-Specker Theorem, “Magic Rectangle” of
Observables, FourQubit Pauli Group, Finite Geometry |