Photo of Ezra Acalapati Madani Ezra Acalapati Madani
Date
April 10 (Fri) 15:30 - 17:00, 2026 (JST)
Speaker
  • Ezra Acalapati Madani (Ph.D. Student, Laboratoire de Physique de l'École Normale Supérieure, France)
Language
English
Host
Haruki Emori

Wave–particle complementarity is one of the central principles of quantum mechanics, traditionally quantified through the Englert–Greenberger–Yasin relation between which-way information and interference visibility. In higher-dimensional and resource-theoretic settings, however, visibility is no longer unique, and it becomes natural to reformulate complementarity in terms of basis-dependent predictability, coherence, and mixedness.

In this talk, I present two related works along this line. First, I discuss an exact complementarity relation between classical definiteness and quantumness, where definiteness is defined operationally through the resilience of a quantum state under nonselective dichotomic yes/no measurements, while the complementary quantum contribution is quantified using a Kirkwood–Dirac-based notion of coherence/interference motivated by recent KD-based coherence measures. Second, I introduce a geometric predictability defined by the Bures distance between the dephased state and the maximally mixed state. This predictability depends only on the observed measurement statistics and admits a closed form in terms of the Bhattacharyya overlap. For pure states, it satisfies an exact complementarity relation with nonclassical Kirkwood–Dirac coherence; for mixed states, this motivates a convex-roof extension whose operational meaning is the classically irreducible part of measurement randomness, with implications for guessing probability and min-entropy. Finally, motivated by the decomposition of entropy production into population and coherence contributions in quantum thermodynamics, and by standard wave–particle–mixedness triality relations, I show how the usual predictability–coherence duality can be promoted into a triality relation involving predictability, coherence, and mixedness.

Altogether, the talk connects wave–particle duality, coherence resource theories, operational guessing tasks, and thermodynamic balance relations within a unified framework.

This is a closed event for scientists. Non-scientists are not allowed to attend. If you are not a member or related person and would like to attend, please contact us using the inquiry form. Please note that the event organizer or speaker must authorize your request to attend.

Inquire about this event