12 research outputs found
Quantifying Quantum Causal Influences
Causal influences are at the core of any empirical science, the reason why
its quantification is of paramount relevance for the mathematical theory of
causality and applications. Quantum correlations, however, challenge our notion
of cause and effect, implying that tools and concepts developed over the years
having in mind a classical world, have to be reevaluated in the presence of
quantum effects. Here, we propose the quantum version of the most common
causality quantifier, the average causal effect (ACE), measuring how much a
target quantum system is changed by interventions on its presumed cause. Not
only it offers an innate manner to quantify causation in two-qubit gates but
also in alternative quantum computation models such as the measurement-based
version, suggesting that causality can be used as a proxy for optimizing
quantum algorithms. Considering quantum teleportation, we show that any pure
entangled state offers an advantage in terms of causal effects as compared to
separable states. This broadness of different uses showcases that, just as in
the classical case, the quantification of causal influence has foundational and
applied consequences and can lead to a yet totally unexplored tool for quantum
information science.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures. Comments welcome
Witnessing Non-Classicality in a Simple Causal Structure with Three Observable Variables
Seen from the modern lens of causal inference, Bell's theorem is nothing else
than the proof that a specific classical causal model cannot explain quantum
correlations. It is thus natural to move beyond Bell's paradigmatic scenario
and consider different causal structures. For the specific case of three
observable variables, it is known that there are three non-trivial causal
networks. Two of those, are known to give rise to quantum non-classicality: the
instrumental and the triangle scenarios. Here we analyze the third and
remaining one, which we name the Evans scenario, akin to the causal structure
underlying the entanglement-swapping experiment. We prove a number of results
about this elusive scenario and introduce new and efficient computational tools
for its analysis that also can be adapted to deal with more general causal
structures. We do not solve its main open problem -- whether quantum
non-classical correlations can arise from it -- but give a significant step in
this direction by proving that post-quantum correlations, analogous to the
paradigmatic Popescu-Rohrlich box, do violate the constraints imposed by a
classical description of Evans causal structure.Comment: 16 pages and 6 figure
Quantum communication complexity beyond Bell nonlocality
Efficient distributed computing offers a scalable strategy for solving
resource-demanding tasks such as parallel computation and circuit optimisation.
Crucially, the communication overhead introduced by the allotment process
should be minimised -- a key motivation behind the communication complexity
problem (CCP). Quantum resources are well-suited to this task, offering clear
strategies that can outperform classical counterparts. Furthermore, the
connection between quantum CCPs and nonlocality provides an
information-theoretic insights into fundamental quantum mechanics. Here we
connect quantum CCPs with a generalised nonlocality framework -- beyond the
paradigmatic Bell's theorem -- by incorporating the underlying causal
structure, which governs the distributed task, into a so-called nonlocal hidden
variable model. We prove that a new class of communication complexity tasks can
be associated to Bell-like inequalities, whose violation is both necessary and
sufficient for a quantum gain. We experimentally implement a multipartite CCP
akin to the guess-your-neighbour-input scenario, and demonstrate a quantum
advantage when multipartite Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger (GHZ) states are shared
among three users.Comment: 21 pages, 5 figure
Semidefinite Tests for Quantum Network Topologies
Quantum networks play a major role in long-distance communication, quantum cryptography, clock synchronization, and distributed quantum computing. Generally, these protocols involve many independent sources sharing entanglement among distant parties that, upon measuring their systems, generate correlations across the network. The question of which correlations a given quantum network can give rise to remains almost uncharted. Here we show that constraints on the observable covariances, previously derived for the classical case, also hold for quantum networks. The network topology yields tests that can be cast as semidefinite programs, thus allowing for the efficient characterization of the correlations in a wide class of quantum networks, as well as systematic derivations of device-independent and experimentally testable witnesses. We obtain such semidefinite tests for fixed measurement settings, as well as parties that independently choose among collections of measurement settings. The applicability of the method is demonstrated for various networks, and compared with previous approaches
Device-independent witness for the nonobjectivity of quantum dynamics
Quantum Darwinism offers an explanation for the emergence of classical objective features (those we are used to at macroscopic scales) from quantum properties at the microscopic level. The interaction of a quantum system with its surroundings redundantly proliferates information to many parts of the environment, turning it accessible and objective to different observers. However, given that one cannot probe the quantum system directly, only its environment, how to determine whether an unknown quantum property can be deemed objective? Here we propose a probabilistic framework to analyze this question and show that objectivity implies a Bell-like inequality. Among several other results, we show quantum violations of this inequality, a device-independent proof of the nonobjectivity of quantum correlations. We also implement a photonic experiment where the temporal degree of freedom of photons is the quantum system of interest, while their polarization acts as the environment. Employing a fully black-box approach, we achieve the violation of a Bell-like inequality, thus certifying the nonobjectivity of the underlying quantum dynamics in a fully device-independent framework