Characterization of nonsignaling bipartite correlations corresponding to quantum states

Markus Frembs and Andreas Döring
Phys. Rev. A 106, 062420 – Published 19 December 2022

Abstract

Characterizing quantum correlations from physical principles is a central problem in the field of quantum information theory. Entanglement breaks bounds on correlations put forth by Bell's theorem, thus challenging the notion of local causality as a physical principle. A natural relaxation is to study no-signalling as a constraint on joint probability distributions. It was shown that, when considered with respect to so-called locally quantum observables, bipartite nonsignalling correlations never exceed their quantum counterparts; still, such correlations generally do not derive from quantum states. This leaves open the search for additional principles which identify quantum states within the larger set of (collections of) nonsignalling joint probability distributions over locally quantum observables. Here, we suggest a natural generalization of no-signalling in the form of no-disturbance to dilated systems. We prove that nonsignalling joint probability distributions satisfying this extension correspond with bipartite quantum states up to a choice of time orientation in subsystems.

  • Received 14 July 2022
  • Accepted 14 November 2022

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevA.106.062420

©2022 American Physical Society

Physics Subject Headings (PhySH)

Quantum Information, Science & Technology

Authors & Affiliations

Markus Frembs* and Andreas Döring

  • Centre for Quantum Dynamics, Griffith University, Yugambeh Country, Gold Coast, Queensland 4222, Australia

  • *m.frembs@griffith.edu.au
  • andreas.doering@posteo.de

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Issue

Vol. 106, Iss. 6 — December 2022

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