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Synthesising Graphical Theories

10 pagesPublished: July 28, 2013

Abstract

In recent years, diagrammatic languages have been shown to be a powerful and expressive tool for reasoning about physical, logical, and semantic processes represented as morphisms in a monoidal category. In particular, categorical quantum mechanics, or "Quantum Picturalism", aims to turn concrete features of quantum theory into abstract structural properties, expressed in the form of diagrammatic identities. One way we search for these properties is to start with a concrete model (e.g. a set of linear maps or finite relations) and start composing generators into diagrams and looking for graphical identities.

Naively, we could automate this procedure by enumerating all diagrams up to a given size and check for equalities, but this is intractable in practice because it produces far too many equations. Luckily, many of these identities are not primitive, but rather derivable from simpler ones. In 2010, Johansson, Dixon, and Bundy developed a technique called conjecture synthesis for automatically generating conjectured term equations to feed into an inductive theorem prover. In this extended abstract, we adapt this technique to diagrammatic theories, expressed as graph rewrite systems, and demonstrate its application by synthesising a graphical theory for studying entangled quantum states.

Keyphrases: categorical quantum mechanics, Conjecture synthesis, graph rewriting, monoidal categories, string diagrams

In: Jacques Fleuriot, Peter Höfner, Annabelle McIver and Alan Smaill (editors). ATx'12/WInG'12: Joint Proceedings of the Workshops on Automated Theory eXploration and on Invariant Generation, vol 17, pages 26--35

Links:
BibTeX entry
@inproceedings{ATx'12/WInG'12:Synthesising_Graphical_Theories,
  author    = {Aleks Kissinger},
  title     = {Synthesising Graphical Theories},
  booktitle = {ATx'12/WInG'12: Joint Proceedings of the Workshops on Automated Theory eXploration and on Invariant Generation},
  editor    = {Jacques Fleuriot and Peter H\textbackslash{}"ofner and Annabelle McIver and Alan Smaill},
  series    = {EPiC Series in Computing},
  volume    = {17},
  pages     = {26--35},
  year      = {2013},
  publisher = {EasyChair},
  bibsource = {EasyChair, https://easychair.org},
  issn      = {2398-7340},
  url       = {https://easychair.org/publications/paper/BCp2},
  doi       = {10.29007/5dkd}}
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