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arxiv: 2605.18639 · v1 · pith:KJD6OQNCnew · submitted 2026-05-18 · 🪐 quant-ph · math-ph· math.MP

Open quantum dynamics without Complete Positivity: a criticism

Pith reviewed 2026-05-20 11:31 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🪐 quant-ph math-phmath.MP
keywords open quantum systemscomplete positivitynon-completely positive mapsdomain restrictionisotropic statescompatibility
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0 comments X

The pith

Restricting non-completely positive maps to compatible states grows too restrictive as system dimension increases.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper examines why complete positivity is often required for maps describing open quantum dynamics and tests an alternative that drops this requirement but limits the maps to only certain compatible initial states. Using isotropic states as the test case, it demonstrates that the allowed set of initial states shrinks rapidly as the dimension of the system grows. A reader would care because this shows the compatibility restriction cannot serve as a general workaround, forcing a choice between complete positivity or accepting very narrow applicability in larger systems.

Core claim

Proposals to describe open quantum dynamics with non-completely positive maps by restricting their domain to subsets of compatible initial states suffer an intrinsic weakness: for isotropic states the allowed domain becomes increasingly small with growing system dimension, limiting the practical usefulness of the approach.

What carries the argument

Domain restriction of non-completely positive maps to subsets of compatible initial states, which is shown to contract sharply for isotropic states as dimension rises.

If this is right

  • In high-dimensional systems fewer initial states can be paired with a given non-completely positive map.
  • The compatibility-based approach cannot scale to arbitrary open-system descriptions without additional constraints.
  • Models of open dynamics that drop complete positivity must either accept severe domain limits or find other consistency conditions.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • Similar domain-shrinkage effects may appear for other common families of states such as Werner states or random mixed states.
  • The result suggests that complete positivity might be harder to avoid in realistic many-body or high-dimensional settings than previously hoped.
  • One could test the claim numerically by sampling random initial states and counting the compatible fraction for fixed non-positive maps at increasing dimensions.

Load-bearing premise

The behavior seen with isotropic states under these restricted maps is representative of the general case for arbitrary states and maps.

What would settle it

Exhibit a family of initial states other than isotropic ones for which the fraction of compatible states remains large or constant as dimension grows under the same non-completely positive maps.

read the original abstract

The requirement of complete positivity is very often regarded as a fundamental consistency condition for the description of open quantum dynamics. We critically examine this requirement and discuss both its physical motivations and its limitations. We analyze proposals based on restricting the domain of non-completely positive maps to subsets of compatible initial states. Using isotropic states as a concrete example, we show that such domain restrictions become increasingly severe with growing system dimension, revealing an intrinsic weakness of the compatibility-based approach.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

2 major / 1 minor

Summary. The paper critically examines the requirement of complete positivity (CP) for maps describing open quantum dynamics. It discusses physical motivations and limitations of CP, then analyzes proposals that restrict the domain of non-CP maps to subsets of 'compatible' initial states. Using isotropic states as a concrete example, the manuscript argues that such domain restrictions become increasingly severe with growing system dimension, thereby revealing an intrinsic weakness of the compatibility-based approach.

Significance. If the scaling result for isotropic states generalizes, the work would usefully highlight a practical limitation of domain-restriction strategies for non-CP dynamics in high-dimensional quantum systems. The concrete example and focus on dimension dependence are strengths, but the significance is tempered by the lack of evidence that the observed behavior is representative rather than symmetry-specific.

major comments (2)
  1. Abstract and isotropic-states section: the claim that domain restrictions 'become increasingly severe with growing system dimension, revealing an intrinsic weakness' rests on the unstated assumption that the shrinkage observed for isotropic states (which are invariant under U⊗U*) is representative of arbitrary states and maps. No comparison with less symmetric families or general argument is provided to support the 'intrinsic' label; if the domain size scales more favorably for generic states, the central criticism does not follow from the example alone.
  2. The manuscript does not include explicit derivations or numerical checks of the positivity constraint on Φ(ρ) for the isotropic family, making it impossible to verify the claimed severity scaling or to assess whether the restriction is load-bearing for the compatibility approach in general.
minor comments (1)
  1. Notation for the restricted domain and the precise definition of 'compatible initial states' could be clarified with a short formal definition early in the text.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

2 responses · 0 unresolved

We are grateful to the referee for the thorough review and insightful comments, which have helped us improve the manuscript. Below we address the major comments point by point.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: Abstract and isotropic-states section: the claim that domain restrictions 'become increasingly severe with growing system dimension, revealing an intrinsic weakness' rests on the unstated assumption that the shrinkage observed for isotropic states (which are invariant under U⊗U*) is representative of arbitrary states and maps. No comparison with less symmetric families or general argument is provided to support the 'intrinsic' label; if the domain size scales more favorably for generic states, the central criticism does not follow from the example alone.

    Authors: We thank the referee for pointing this out. The isotropic states were selected as a concrete, analytically solvable example due to their symmetry and relevance in quantum information theory. We agree that without a general argument, the claim of an 'intrinsic weakness' may be overstated. In the revised version, we have modified the abstract and the discussion in the isotropic states section to clarify that the observed severe domain restrictions for this family indicate a potential limitation of the compatibility approach, and we have added a remark noting that further investigation with other state families would be valuable to assess generality. revision: partial

  2. Referee: The manuscript does not include explicit derivations or numerical checks of the positivity constraint on Φ(ρ) for the isotropic family, making it impossible to verify the claimed severity scaling or to assess whether the restriction is load-bearing for the compatibility approach in general.

    Authors: We acknowledge this shortcoming. To address it, we have included in the revised manuscript an appendix providing the explicit derivation of the positivity condition for Φ(ρ) when ρ is an isotropic state. Furthermore, we have added numerical results for dimensions up to d=5 to illustrate the scaling of the allowed domain size with dimension. These additions should make the severity of the restrictions verifiable and help evaluate the implications for the compatibility approach. revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No circularity: criticism relies on explicit isotropic-state calculation in standard QIT

full rationale

The paper's central move is to take the compatibility-based approach to non-CP maps, restrict its domain to states compatible with a given map, and then compute the size of that domain explicitly for the family of isotropic states. This is a direct, parameter-free calculation using the known form of isotropic states and the positivity condition on the output; it does not fit any parameter to data and then relabel the fit as a prediction, nor does it define any quantity in terms of the result it claims to derive. The argument is self-contained against external benchmarks (standard definitions of isotropic states and complete positivity) and does not rest on a load-bearing self-citation chain. The observed shrinkage with dimension is therefore an independent observation rather than a tautology.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 2 axioms · 0 invented entities

The paper relies on standard axioms of quantum mechanics and quantum information theory such as the definition of completely positive maps and the properties of isotropic states; no free parameters or invented entities are introduced in the abstract.

axioms (2)
  • standard math Completely positive maps preserve positivity when extended to larger systems including an ancillary space.
    Invoked as the standard consistency condition being criticized.
  • domain assumption Isotropic states form a one-parameter family that can be used to test map compatibility.
    Used as the concrete example to demonstrate dimension dependence.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5601 in / 1237 out tokens · 35247 ms · 2026-05-20T11:31:56.885072+00:00 · methodology

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Reference graph

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