1. Introduction
The Boolean algebra (or the equivalent Boolean lattice) is a mathematical structure playing an important role in many scientific and technical fields such as logic, probability theory, circuitry, computer science. Only quantum theory challenges the general applicability of this structure, since the dichotomic observables (those with spectrum 
) do not form a Boolean algebra, but a lattice where the distributivity law fails [
1,
2,
3].
The system of the dichotomic observables is called the quantum logic and becomes the framework for a new general definition of the transition probability. This definition includes not only the well-known quantum mechanical transition probabilities between pure states or wave functions, but further physically meaningful and experimentally verifiable novel cases. It is pointed out that the transition probabilities have a purely algebraic origin, which has mostly been ignored in the past. In this way, they become very different from the classical probabilities which result from probability measures.
Other approaches to the transition probabilities are possible; one is based on projective quantum measurement (Lüders–von Neumann quantum measurement process) [
4] and another is based on a non-Boolean extension of the conditional probabilities [
5]. The approach presented here, based on the new definition, is more elementary than these two since it does not require advanced concepts such as quantum measurement or the non-Boolean conditional probabilities. Some basic knowledge of quantum mechanics and linear algebra (here particularly the Cauchy–Schwarz inequality) are enough to understand the paper.
After a brief sketch of the quantum logic and its state space in 
Section 2, the transition probability will be defined formally in 
Section 3. In 
Section 4, some examples will be studied to reveal the link to the well-known quantum mechanical transition probabilities and to identify some further novel cases. The connection to the typical quantum indeterminacy is discussed in 
Section 5.
  2. Quantum Logic and States
Commonly, the quantum mechanical observables are mathematically represented by self-adjoint (Hermitian) linear operators on a Hilbert space H. The dichotomic observables (those with spectrum ) become self-adjoint projection operators and form the quantum logic . It includes 0 and the identity . By considering the one-to-one relation between the self-adjoint projection operators and the closed linear subspaces of H, it becomes evident that  is a lattice with order relation ≤, infimum ∧ and supremum ∨. Moreover, 0 is the smallest element,  is the largest element in  and, for any ,  is the orthogonal complement of p.
For ,  is equivalent to each one of the following conditions: , ,  or . A pair  is called orthogonal if  or if one of the following equivalent conditions holds: , , ,  or . Orthogonality means that p and q mutually exclude each other.
A 
state shall allocate a probability to each element of the quantum logic in a consistent way and thus becomes a map 
 with 
 and 
 for each orthogonal pair 
 [
1]. The states form a convex set 
 which is called the 
state space.
If the dimension of the Hilbert space is two, it is necessary to distinguish between 
 and the subset 
; 
 consists of those states that can be extended to a linear map defined for all bounded observables. If it exists, this linear extension is unique because of the spectral theorem and is denoted by 
 again. Due to Gleason’s theorem [
6,
7], the identity 
 holds for all other Hilbert space dimensions (
). Although 
 is associated with the linear structure of the observables, 
 depends on the algebraic structure of the quantum logic only.
  3. Transition Probability
The novel definition of the transition probability shall now be presented. If a pair 
 with 
 and some 
 satisfy the identity
	  
r is called the 
transition probability from p to 
q and is denoted by 
. The identity 
 then becomes equivalent to the set inclusion
      
      and means that whenever the probability of 
p is 1, the probability of 
q is determined and must be 
r. Particularly in the situation after a quantum measurement that has provided the outcome 
p, the probability of 
q becomes 
r, independently of the initial state before the measurement.
 If  and  exists with , then  exists and . This follows immediately from the above definition.
The transition probability 
 is a characteristic of the algebraic structure of the observables. If the Hilbert space dimension does not equal two, we have 
 and the transition probability becomes a characteristic of the even more basic structure of the quantum logic.
      
Theorem 1. Suppose that  and q are elements in the quantum logic .
- (i) 
- The transition probability from p to q exists and  iff the linear operators p and q satisfy the simple algebraic identity 
- (ii) 
- If  holds and if both transition probabilities  and  exist, they are equal: 
 Proof.  (i) The linear extension of a state 
 becomes a positive linear functional and the Cauchy– Schwarz inequality holds:
        
        for all bounded linear operators 
x and 
y [
8]. This implies that for 
 with 
, 
 for all bounded linear operators 
x. Please note that projections are idempotent (
).
⇐: Suppose . If  and , then  and . Therefore, .
⇒: Now suppose . Let  be any state in . If , then . If , define a state  by  for . Then  and therefore . We now have  for all  and thus .
(ii) Suppose that  holds and that  and  both exist. By (i) we have that  and  with  and . Then  and either  or . In the second case,  and therefore  □.
 An immediate consequence of the theorem is that  iff  and that  iff p and q are orthogonal.
The transition probability is invariant under unitary transformations u:  exists if and only if  exists, and . This follows from the above theorem and directly from the definition of the transition probability.
If the transition probability 
 exists, one can use the 
trace (
tr) to calculate it: 
 and therefore
      
The term  always exists (unless ), but it represents a transition probability as defined above only in certain cases. The trace and the last equation cannot help to identify these cases.
There is an interesting connection between the transition probability defined here and the 
equiangularity studied in [
9]: if the projections 
p and 
q are equiangular, the transition probabilities 
 and 
 both exist. Transition probabilities are not considered in [
9], but this follows by combining theorem 2.3 from there with the above theorem.
  4. Examples
Example 1. Suppose that  and q commute and that  exists. Then  and  and either  or . In the first case, p and q are orthogonal and . In the second case, we have  and . This means that a non-trivial transition probability () requires that p and q do not commute.
 Example 2. Suppose that  is a normalized element of the Hilbert space H. With the common bracket notation (Dirac notation),  becomes the projector on the one-dimensional subspace generated by . For any other  we then have . This means that  exists for all elements  with . The map  becomes the pure state defined by .
 Example 3. If q, too, is the projector on a one-dimensional subspace and if this subspace is generated by the normalized element , we have  andThis is the well-known quantum mechanical transition probability between the Hilbert space elements  and , often known as wave functions or pure states.  However, the general and abstract definition of the transition probability in 
Section 3 goes beyond this situation. The following example demonstrates that the existence of 
 does not require 
p to be a projector on a one-dimensional space.
A non-zero transition probability  requires that the dimension of the image  of q is not smaller than the dimension of the image  of p. This can be seen in the following way: the identity  with  implies that  and p have the same image ; therefore .
If , then  and the dimensions of the images of both q and its orthogonal complement  cannot be smaller than the dimension of the image of p. Therefore, a case with  and  requires that the dimension of the Hilbert space H is not less than four.
Example 4. Consider the matriceswith  and . Some matrix calculations show that ,  (i.e., ) and that . The theorem then yields that  exists with  Many further examples can be constructed by using  and  instead of p and q with any unitary transformation u; then .
Only if p is a projector on a one-dimensional space, the transition probability  can be represented in the familiar way with the inner product of the Hilbert space as in the examples 2 and 3. In the general case, however, this is not possible; nevertheless,  constitutes the physically meaningful and experimentally verifiable probability of q in the situation after a quantum measurement that has provided the outcome q. The initial state before the measurement becomes irrelevant here in the same way as with a projector p on a one-dimensional space.
Example 5. With the same p as in the last example,  exists only for some, but not for all . Since we have , the above dimension considerations in connection with example 4 show that  cannot exist for any q that is a projector on a one-dimensional subspace and not orthogonal to p.
If ,  exists only for some, but not for all  and, therefore, the definition of a state by  fails.
 Example 6. A case, where  exists, but  does not exist, can be constructed by using any projector p on a one-dimensional space and any projector q with  and  (i.e., p and q are not orthogonal). Since ,  exists, and since ,  cannot exist.
   5. Quantum Indeterminacy
Our common sense, philosophy, logic and the classical sciences make us think that each proposition is either true or false; there is nothing in between. Is it possible to allocate an attribute ‘true’ or ‘false’ in a consistent way to each element of the quantum logic 
? Replacing ‘true’ by 1 and ‘false’ by 0, this would result in a state 
 with 
 for all 
. Such a state is called 
deterministic (or 
dispersion-free). However, the Bell-Kochen-Specker theorem tells us that a deterministic state is impossible on the Hilbert space quantum logic 
 except that the dimension of the Hilbert space is two [
10,
11,
12].
This can also be seen by considering the transition probabilities. Suppose that  holds for  and that  is a deterministic state. Since  would imply , it follows that . We thus get  for all projectors p on one-dimensional subspaces and, furthermore, for all orthogonal sums of such projectors. With a finite-dimensional Hilbert space H, this would exhaust all elements of the quantum logic  including  and yield a contradiction to . Therefore,  does not include any deterministic state and, for , there is no deterministic state at all.
However, the transition probability  achieves more than just ruling out determinism. It dictates the precise value of the probability of q, whenever p carries the probability 1 (particularly in the situation after a quantum measurement that has provided the outcome q), and is a characteristic of the algebraic structure of the quantum logic.
The most famous manifestation of the typical quantum indeterminacy is Heisenberg’s 
uncertainty relation [
13]. Furthermore, general uncertainty relations are due to Robertson [
14] and Schrödinger [
15]. A transition probability 
 with 
 also represents a kind of uncertainty relation: if 
p is known with certainty, 
q must be unknown and carry the probability 
r.
  6. Conclusions
It is well-established that the algebraic structure of the Hilbert space quantum logic rules out deterministic states (Bell-Kochen-Specker theorem [
10,
11,
12]). In the present paper, it has been seen that the algebraic structure does a lot more beyond that; it dictates the precise values of the transition probabilities which thus provide an unexpected access to quantum probability that does not rely on states or wave functions.
If  and  commute, only three cases are possible for the transition probability: either it does not exist or , which is equivalent to , or , which is equivalent to the orthogonality and mutual exclusivity of p and q (example 1). The same holds, if p and q were elements of a Boolean algebra, where  defines a logical relation and means that the proposition p implies the proposition q. Therefore,  can be considered an extension of this logical relation to the Hilbert space quantum logic. This extended relation, however, is associated with a probability and introduces a continuum of new cases between the two classical cases ‘p implies q’ and ‘p rules out q’.
The transition probabilities introduced here include not only the well-known quantum mechanical transition probabilities between pure states or wave functions, but further physically meaningful and experimentally verifiable novel cases where 
 exists although 
p is a projection on a subspace with dimension higher than one (Example 4). These novel cases become possible also in quantum logics that do not contain any projections on one-dimensional subspaces. Such quantum logics are formed by the self-adjoint projections in the von Neumann algebras of the types II and III, which play an important role in quantum field theory and quantum statistical mechanics [
16].