The idea that events obey a definite causal order is deeply rooted in our
understanding of the world and at the basis of the very notion of time. But
where does causal order come from, and is it a necessary property of nature? We
address these questions from the standpoint of quantum mechanics in a new
framework for multipartite correlations which does not assume a pre-defined
global causal structure but only the validity of quantum mechanics locally. All
known situations that respect causal order, including space-like and time-like
separated experiments, are captured by this framework in a unified way.
Surprisingly, we find correlations that cannot be understood in terms of
definite causal order. These correlations violate a 'causal inequality' that is
satisfied by all space-like and time-like correlations. We further show that in
a classical limit causal order always arises, which suggests that space-time
may emerge from a more fundamental structure in a quantum-to-classical
transition.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figure