DocumentCode
3257539
Title
Computation and the Periodic Table
Author
Baez, John
Author_Institution
Dept. of Math., Univ. of California, Riverside, CA, USA
fYear
2009
fDate
11-14 Aug. 2009
Firstpage
211
Lastpage
211
Abstract
In physics, Feynman diagrams are used to reason about quantum processes. Similar diagrams can also be used to reason about logic, where they represent proofs, and computation, where they represent programs. With the rise of topological quantum field theory and quantum computation, it became clear that diagrammatic reasoning takes advantage of an extensive network of interlocking analogies between physics, topology, logic and computation. These analogies can be made precise using the formalism of symmetric monoidal closed categories. But symmetric monoidal categories are just the n=l,fc=3 entry of a hypothesized "periodic table" of fc-tuply monoidal n- categories. This raises the question of how these analogies extend. An important clue comes from the way symmetric monoidal closed 2-categories describe rewrite rules in the lambda calculus and multiplicative intuitionistic linear logic. This talk is based on work in progress with Paul-Andre Mellies and Mike Stay.
Keywords
Feynman diagrams; group theory; lambda calculus; periodic system of elements; quantum computing; quantum field theory; Feynman diagram; diagrammatic reasoning; interlocking analogy; lambda calculus; multiplicative intuitionistic linear logic; periodic table; quantum computation; quantum process; symmetric monoidal closed category; topological quantum field theory; Calculus; Computer networks; Computer science; Logic; Mathematics; Network topology; Physics computing; Quantum computing; Quantum mechanics; USA Councils;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Logic In Computer Science, 2009. LICS '09. 24th Annual IEEE Symposium on
Conference_Location
Los Angeles, CA
ISSN
1043-6871
Print_ISBN
978-0-7695-3746-7
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/LICS.2009.43
Filename
5230580
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