Quantifying quantum nonlocality
Benjamin Francis Toner
- 12 Aug 2013
TL;DR: In this article, Tsirelson et al. showed that one bit of communication is sufficient to simulate the correlations of projective measurements on a maximally entangled state of two qubits, and five bits of communication are sufficient for the joint correlation of two-outcome measurements on any bipartite quantum state.
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Abstract: Quantum mechanics is nonlocal, meaning it cannot be described by any classical local hidden variable model. In this thesis we study two aspects of quantum nonlocality. Part I addresses the question of what classical resources are required to simulate nonlocal quantum correlations. We start by constructing new local models for noisy entangled quantum states. These constructions exploit the connection between nonlocality and Grothendieck's inequality, first noticed by Tsirelson. Next, we consider local models augmented by a limited amount of classical communication. After generalizing Bell inequalities to this setting, we show that (i) one bit of communication is sufficient to simulate the correlations of projective measurements on a maximally entangled state of two qubits, and (ii) five bits of communication are sufficient to simulate the joint correlation of two-outcome measurements on any bipartite quantum state. The latter result can be interpreted as a stronger (constrained) version of Grothendieck's inequality. In part II, we investigate the monogamy of nonlocal correlations. In a setting where three parties, A, B, and C, share an entangled quantum state of arbitrary dimension, we: (i) bound the trade-off between AB's and AC's violation of the CHSH inequality, obtaining an intriguing generalization of Tsirelson's bound, and (ii) demonstrate that forcing B and C to be classically correlated prevents A and B from violating certain Bell inequalities. We study not only correlations that arise within quantum theory, but also arbitrary correlations that do not allow signaling between separate groups of parties. These results are based on new techniques for obtaining Tsirelson bounds, or bounds on the quantum value of a Bell inequality, and have applications to interactive proof systems and cryptography.
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Citations
Local hidden--variable models for entangled quantum states
TL;DR: Local hidden-variable models for quantum entanglement have been studied extensively as discussed by the authors, both in the bipartite and multipartite case, and some of the most relevant open questions are discussed in this context.
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Local hidden?variable models for entangled quantum states
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