Quantum Markov chain
In mathematics, a quantum Markov chain is a noncommutative generalization of the classical Markov chain, in which the usual notions of probability are replaced by those of quantum probability. This framework was introduced by Luigi Accardi, who pioneered the use of quasi‐conditional expectations as the quantum analogue of classical conditional expectations.
Introduction
Broadly speaking, the theory of quantum Markov chains mirrors that of classical Markov chains with two essential modifications. First, the classical initial state is replaced by a density matrix. Second, the sharp measurement described by projection operators is supplanted by positive operator valued measures. Central to this approach is the notion of a quasi‐conditional expectation—a completely positive map that generalizes the classical conditional expectation to the noncommutative setting—which was introduced by Accardi and his collaborators. A unification approach to quantum Markov chains is also provided by Luigi Accardi, Abdessatar Souissi, and El Gheteb Soueidy in their work, which further develops and consolidates the theory.Formal Statement
More precisely, a quantum Markov chain is defined as a pair where:- is a density matrix on a Hilbert space ;
- is a C*-algebra of bounded operators;
- is a quantum channel—that is, a completely positive trace-preserving map—which serves as a quasi‐conditional expectation.
for all.