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Black boxes in spacetime: semi-device-independent information processing with spatiotemporal degrees of freedom

ORAL

Abstract

Nonlocality, as demonstrated by the violation of Bell inequalities, enables device-independent cryptographic tasks that do not require users to trust their apparatus. In this article, we consider devices whose inputs are spatiotemporal degrees of freedom, e.g. orientations or time durations. Without assuming the validity of quantum theory, we prove that the devices' statistical response must respect their input's symmetries, with profound foundational and technological implications. We exactly characterize the bipartite binary quantum correlations in terms of local symmetries, indicating a fundamental relation between spacetime and quantum theory. For Bell experiments characterized by two input angles, we show that the correlations are accounted for by a local hidden variable model if they contain enough noise, but conversely must be nonlocal if they are pure enough. This allows us to construct a "Bell witness" that certifies nonlocality with fewer measurements than possible without such symmetries, suggesting a new class of semi-device-independent protocols for quantum technologies.

Based on Phys. Rev. Research 2, 013112 (2020).

Presenters

  • Markus Müller

    Institute for Quantum Optics and Quantum Information, Vienna, Austrian Academy of Sciences

Authors

  • Markus Müller

    Institute for Quantum Optics and Quantum Information, Vienna, Austrian Academy of Sciences

  • Marius Krumm

    Institute for Quantum Optics and Quantum Information, Vienna, Austrian Academy of Sciences

  • Andrew Garner

    Institute for Quantum Optics and Quantum Information, Vienna, Austrian Academy of Sciences