Assessing the dynamical assumptions in Tsirelson inequality tests of non-classicality in harmonic oscillators
Pith reviewed 2026-05-18 19:49 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Quantum analysis shows uniform precession holds closely enough in harmonic oscillators that Tsirelson violations require quantum interference terms.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
By carrying out a quantum-mechanical analysis of the Tsirelson inequality in the harmonic oscillator, the authors develop a protocol to assess generalised conditions of uniform precession. They show that various measures of uniform precession, some of which are related to Leggett-Garg quantities, are satisfied well enough that the presence of quantum-mechanical interference terms must be implied.
What carries the argument
Generalised conditions of uniform precession, checked via single-time measurements and linked to dwell time, crossing number and probability currents for states that violate the Tsirelson inequality.
If this is right
- Tsirelson violations in the harmonic oscillator cannot be explained by classical macrorealism that breaks only the uniform-precession assumption.
- The protocol implies that quantum interference terms are necessary to produce violations once the precession measures are taken into account.
- Dwell-time and crossing-number results constrain the properties of any state that achieves a Tsirelson violation.
- A group-theoretic treatment of the Tsirelson operator supplies additional structure for analysing violating states.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The same precession-assessment method could be applied to other bounded or unbounded quantum systems to strengthen non-classicality tests.
- Combining the Tsirelson approach with direct Leggett-Garg measurements might close remaining loopholes in tests of macroscopic coherence.
- The incidental results on probability currents suggest new observables for detecting interference without sequential measurements.
Load-bearing premise
The chosen measures of generalised uniform precession are sufficient to rule out classical explanations for Tsirelson inequality violations in the harmonic oscillator model.
What would settle it
A harmonic-oscillator state that violates the Tsirelson inequality while showing substantial deviations in the uniform-precession measures such as dwell time or crossing number.
Figures
read the original abstract
"Macrorealism" posits that a system possesses definite properties at all times and that we can discover these properties, in principle, without disturbing the system's subsequent behaviour. The Leggett-Garg inequalities are derived under these assumptions and are readily violated by standard quantum mechanics, thereby providing a scheme to test whether demonstrably macroscopic systems can exhibit quantum coherence. Unfortunately, Leggett-Garg tests suffer from the difficult to avoid clumsiness loophole - the difficulty of proving that sequential measurements have not inadvertently disturbed the system. The recently uncovered Tsirelson inequality is derived from the simple dynamical assumption of uniform precession, obeyed by many classical systems, and requires only single-time measurements. However, Tsirelson inequality violations could be explained by a macrorealistic system that merely breaks the dynamical assumption, rather than genuine quantum behaviour. By carrying out a quantum-mechanical analysis of the Tsirelson inequality in the harmonic oscillator, we develop a protocol to rule out this possibility by assessing generalised conditions of uniform precession. We show that various measures of uniform precession, some of which are related to Leggett-Garg quantities, are satisfied well enough that the presence of quantum-mechanical interference terms must be implied. We derive several incidental mathematical results relating to violating states of Tsirelson's inequality, concerning dwell time, crossing number and probability currents, and also consider a group theoretic analysis of the Tsirelson operator.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript analyzes the Tsirelson inequality in the quantum harmonic oscillator to address the loophole that violations could arise from breaking the uniform-precession dynamical assumption rather than from genuine non-classicality. It develops generalized measures of uniform precession (including Leggett-Garg-related quantities, dwell time, crossing number, and probability currents), performs a quantum-mechanical evaluation showing these measures are satisfied to a sufficient degree, and concludes that this implies the presence of interference terms. Incidental results include mathematical relations for violating states and a group-theoretic analysis of the Tsirelson operator.
Significance. If the central claim holds, the work provides a concrete protocol for closing a key loophole in Tsirelson-based tests of macrorealism for systems like the harmonic oscillator, strengthening their use as witnesses of quantum coherence in macroscopic regimes. The derivation of dwell-time, crossing-number, and current relations, together with the group-theoretic treatment, constitutes reusable mathematical contributions. The paper supplies explicit derivations that can be checked independently.
major comments (3)
- [§4] §4 (numerical evaluation of measures): the statement that the measures 'are satisfied well enough' to imply interference lacks explicit quantitative thresholds, confidence intervals, or comparison against the maximum violation achievable by a classical stochastic process that satisfies exactly the same generalized precession conditions while violating the Tsirelson bound; without these, the sufficiency claim for ruling out all classical explanations remains unestablished.
- [§3.1] §3.1, definition of generalized uniform precession: the measures (including those related to Leggett-Garg) are shown to hold in the quantum case, but the manuscript does not demonstrate that satisfaction of these specific quantities is incompatible with any classical hidden-variable or stochastic dynamics that could still produce a Tsirelson violation; a counter-example construction or completeness argument is required to support the implication.
- [§5] §5 (post-selection handling): the protocol involves post-selection on measurement outcomes, yet the text does not quantify or bound the resulting bias on the precession measures; this directly affects whether the observed satisfaction can be taken as evidence against classical explanations.
minor comments (2)
- [§2] Notation for the Tsirelson operator in §2 is introduced without an explicit comparison table to the standard Leggett-Garg form; adding one would improve readability.
- [Figure 3] Figure 3 caption does not state the exact parameter values or Hilbert-space truncation used for the numerical curves.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their careful and constructive review of our manuscript. The comments raise important points about the quantitative rigor and the logical implications of our generalized uniform precession measures. We respond to each major comment in turn and outline the revisions we intend to make to address them.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [§4] the statement that the measures 'are satisfied well enough' to imply interference lacks explicit quantitative thresholds, confidence intervals, or comparison against the maximum violation achievable by a classical stochastic process that satisfies exactly the same generalized precession conditions while violating the Tsirelson bound; without these, the sufficiency claim for ruling out all classical explanations remains unestablished.
Authors: We agree that more quantitative detail is needed. In the revised manuscript, we will add explicit thresholds for each precession measure, derived from the numerical data, along with statistical confidence intervals. Regarding comparison to classical stochastic processes, we note that our analysis focuses on verifying the conditions in the quantum case. We will include a discussion of how the observed values compare to the boundary for classical violation, but a full optimization over all possible classical models satisfying the conditions exactly is a substantial extension that we will flag as future work. This will make the sufficiency claim more precise without overclaiming. revision: partial
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Referee: [§3.1] the measures (including those related to Leggett-Garg) are shown to hold in the quantum case, but the manuscript does not demonstrate that satisfaction of these specific quantities is incompatible with any classical hidden-variable or stochastic dynamics that could still produce a Tsirelson violation; a counter-example construction or completeness argument is required to support the implication.
Authors: The measures are designed to capture the essential aspects of the uniform precession assumption underlying the Tsirelson inequality. By showing they hold in the quantum harmonic oscillator, we argue that violations cannot be attributed to breaking these conditions. However, we acknowledge that demonstrating incompatibility with all possible classical dynamics would require a completeness result showing that any classical model satisfying these measures cannot violate Tsirelson. This is not provided in the current work, as our focus is on the quantum evaluation. We will revise the text to clarify the scope of the implication and avoid suggesting a full closure of all classical loopholes. We believe this addresses the core of the comment while maintaining the paper's contribution. revision: no
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Referee: [§5] the protocol involves post-selection on measurement outcomes, yet the text does not quantify or bound the resulting bias on the precession measures; this directly affects whether the observed satisfaction can be taken as evidence against classical explanations.
Authors: This is a valid concern. We will add a new subsection in §5 that quantifies the post-selection bias. Specifically, we will derive bounds on how post-selection affects the dwell time, crossing number, and current measures, using the known post-selection probabilities in the harmonic oscillator model. This will show that the bias is negligible for the parameters considered and does not undermine the conclusion that the precession conditions are satisfied. revision: yes
- Demonstrating that the generalized uniform precession measures are incompatible with classical models capable of violating the Tsirelson inequality.
Circularity Check
Derivation self-contained via direct quantum computation of precession measures
full rationale
The paper computes generalized uniform precession measures (dwell time, crossing number, probability currents, and Leggett-Garg-related quantities) directly from the quantum harmonic oscillator dynamics and compares them to the Tsirelson inequality. These quantities are obtained from the Schrödinger evolution and operator algebra without fitting any parameters to the target violation data or redefining the conclusion as an input. The claim that satisfaction of the measures implies interference terms follows from explicit evaluation rather than from any self-definitional loop, fitted-input prediction, or load-bearing self-citation chain. The analysis therefore remains independent of its final inference and does not reduce the result to its own assumptions by construction.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption Uniform precession is a dynamical assumption obeyed by many classical systems and used to derive the Tsirelson inequality.
Forward citations
Cited by 1 Pith paper
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Comparing quantum and classical finite state generators
Classical finite state generators can exceed the Tsirelson bound of 2√2 in temporal correlations, but quantum generators maintain stronger correlations longer under time delays and scrambling operations.
Reference graph
Works this paper leans on
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[1]
Declare a data set, comprising measurements of⟨A⟩ (the Tsirelson test itself) as well as subsidiary quan- tities to gauge the dynamical assumption of uni- form precession (UP)
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[2]
Write the Tsirelson quantity in the following form: 1 2(1 +⟨A⟩) = (Positive term) + (UP violating term) + (Quantum interference term),(3.1) where the scaled Tsirelson quantity 1 2(1 +⟨A⟩) is 8 bounded between 0 and 1 classically and hence de- scribes a probability
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[3]
Establish whether or not the UP violating term is capable of dominating the quantum interference terms in terms of explaining the Tsirelson inequal- ity violation. In other words, whether or not a classical model with no quantum-mechanical inter- ferences could account for the violation. If not, the failure of macrorealism per se must also be implied. B. ...
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[4]
By this measure, a classical and quantum oscillator are indistinguishable
Therefore, ⟨ ˆTD(2π)⟩= 1 2 .(4.3) We see that the dwell time, integrated over a full period, is exactly the classical value. By this measure, a classical and quantum oscillator are indistinguishable. The dwell time operator is diagonal over a full period (and in fact is proportional to the identity)—which can be understood as due to the fact that ˆTD is T...
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[5]
and references therein). This in turn is related to the fact that the Wigner function, for a class of potentials, has approximately classical evolution. This behaviour can be affected by monitoring (e.g. with projection oper- ators onto ranges of position at intermittent times), but this effect is not large unless the projections are onto very small regio...
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[6]
Therefore, we find Qnk = 2Fnk, Q nn = 0.(C6) To evaluate Equation C5, we use the closed form expressions for the eigenstates of the harmonic oscillator in terms of the Hermite polynomialsH n(x), Ψn(x) = π− 1 4 √ 2nn! exp −1 2 x2 Hn(x).(C7) Consequently, using the following identities for the derivatives of Hermite polynomials, H ′ 0(0) = 0, H ′ n(0) = 2n ...
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[7]
Proof Strategy We aim to show that the magnitude of⟨A⟩is less than 1 for the state |ψ2⟩=α|n⟩+β|k⟩,(E1) where|α| 2 +|β| 2 = 1. The expectation value of ˆAfor|ψ 2⟩is ⟨A⟩=|α| 2 ⟨n| ˆA|n⟩| {z } 0 +|β|2 ⟨k| ˆA|k⟩| {z } 0 +2 Re(α∗β)⟨n| ˆA|k⟩.(E2) Expanding out⟨A⟩in terms ofQ nk yields ⟨A⟩= 2 Re(α ∗β)Qnk 1 +e 2πi 3 (n−k) +e 4πi 3 (n−k) .(E3) The sum of exponenti...
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To be precise, consider the following short proof: Letα=ce iθ andβ=se iϕ. Then Re(α∗β) =cscos(ϕ−θ). cos(ϕ−θ) is maximised ifϕ=θ. Thus we can chooseα=candβ=s, up to a global phase. Then, the constraintc 2 +s 2 = 1 means we can parametrisecandsasc= cos(ξ) ands= sin(ξ). Therefore, cs= 1 2 sin(2ξ), which is maximised if sin(2ξ) = 1. Hence, max(cs) = max (Re(α...
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[9]
Thus,⟨A⟩for an equal 18 superposition of|ψ 2⟩= 1√ 2(|n⟩+|k⟩) withn−k= 0 mod 3 is ⟨A⟩= 2 1 2 Qnk(3) = 3Qnk.(E4) We see that the problem of showing that|⟨A⟩|<1 reduces to showing that |Qnk|< 1 3 ∀n, ks.tk−n= 3m,form∈N,(E5) where we only need to considerm≥0 becauseQ nk is symmetric. One might conjecture that theQ 03 matrix element will be the largest in magn...
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[10]
Qnk = 0 Q01 0Q 03 · · · Q10 0 Q12 0· · · 0Q 21 0 Q23 · · · Q30 0Q 32 0· · ·
The largest matrix element, in magnitude, on a diagonal i.e for fixedm,|Q n,n+2m+1|is|Q 0,2m+1|. Qnk = 0 Q01 0Q 03 · · · Q10 0 Q12 0· · · 0Q 21 0 Q23 · · · Q30 0Q 32 0· · · ... ... ... ... ... .(E6)
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Qnk = 0 Q01 0 Q03 · · · Q10 0Q 12 0· · · 0Q 21 0Q 23 · · · Q30 0Q 32 0· · ·
The non-zero matrix elements decrease in magnitude across the 0th row i.e|Q 0,2m+1|is a decreasing function inm. Qnk = 0 Q01 0 Q03 · · · Q10 0Q 12 0· · · 0Q 21 0Q 23 · · · Q30 0Q 32 0· · · ... ... ... ... ... .(E7) We already have established that the only non-zero matrix elements of theQ nk are those with opposite parity, and we...
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Diagonals of theQ nk matrix Showing the first statement is slightly complicated by the fact that the evennand oddnmatrix elements have different formulas. Whennis even (and hencekis odd) the relevant formula (obtained using Equations C9 and C11) is |Qeven nk |= r 2 π (n−1)!!√ n! ! (k+ 1)! (k−n) √ k!2 k+1 2 k+1 2 ! .(E8) Whennis odd (and hencekis even) the...
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0th Row of theQ nk Matrix is Decreasing The second thing to show is thatQ 0,2m+1 is a decreasing function inm. To accomplish this, consider the fraction |Q0,2m+3/Q0,2m+1|and show it is less than 1. Q0,2m+3 = r 2 π (−1)!!√ 0! ! (2m+ 4)! (2m+ 3) p (2m+ 3)!2 m+2 (m+ 2)! (E22) Q0,2m+1 = r 2 π (−1)!!√ 0! ! (2m+ 2)! (2m+ 1) p (2m+ 1)!2 m+1 (m+ 1)! (E23) where (...
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To show this claim, one simply needs to show two statements hold true
Outline and Preliminaries This appendix is devoted to proving that if Tsirelson’s inequality is violated by a given quantum state, with support entirely inH k, then that state will satisfy all four LG3s (Eqs 1.12-1.15) if the measurement timest 1, t2, t3 are the same as in the Tsirelson scheme. To show this claim, one simply needs to show two statements h...
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We straightforwardly show this in Section I 2
A Tsirelson violation implies satisfaction of the first LG3 i.eL 1 >0. We straightforwardly show this in Section I 2. In fact, this result holds for arbitrary quantum states
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Conse- quently, all four LG3s are positive
For quantum states inH 0,H 1,H 2, the first Leggett–Garg quantity is always the smallest of the four. Conse- quently, all four LG3s are positive
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Tsirelson Violation=⇒L 1 >0 Consider a state that violates Tsirelson’s inequality such that ⟨Q1 +Q 2 +Q 3⟩>1 (I1) or in fact⟨Q 1 +Q 2 +Q 3⟩<−1 (this doesn’t change the argument at all). Now, consider the Cauchy-Schwarz inequality applied to the left hand side of Equation I1 ⟨(Q1 +Q 2 +Q 3)2⟩ ≥(⟨Q 1 +Q 2 +Q 3⟩)2.(I2) Using Equations I1 and I2 we can write ...
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Relating the Tsirelson quantity to the quantum current Consider the limit definition of the integral to write⟨ ˆTD⟩as a Riemann sum, ⟨ ˆTD⟩= 1 2π " lim N→∞ 2π N+ 1 NX n=0 θ 2πn N+ 1 # ,(K1) = 1 3 2X n=0 θ 2πn 3 + ε 2π ,(K2) whereεrefers to an error term. The equality certainly holds for someε∈R. Assuming⟨θ(t)⟩is analytic int, then⟨θ(t)⟩has a well-defined ...
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A Tsirelson satisfaction condition onH 0 We will refer to the dwell time over 2/3 of a period asT 2/3. Consider the following integral approximation: T2/3 = 1 6 3X j=1 ⟨θj⟩+⟨θ 1⟩ + 1 2π 3X j=1 Ej (K16) = 1 12 ⟨A⟩+ 1 12 ⟨Q1⟩+ 1 3 + 1 2π 3X j=1 Ej.(K17) Therefore, ⟨A⟩= 12T 2/3 −4− ⟨Q 1⟩ − 6 π 3X j=1 Ej (K18) where bothE 1 andE 2 are left end point e...
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