Quantum theory predicts the
existence of so-called tripartite-entangled states, in which three quantum
particles are related in a way that has no counterpart in classical physics.
Theoretical physicists would like to understand how well new theories,
alternatives to quantum theory, might be able to reproduce the behavior of
these states.
John Clauser, Alain Aspect and Anton
Zeilinger, whose work was recently recognized by the Nobel Committee, have
experimentally proven Bell’s theorem, showing that no local hidden-variable
alternative to quantum theory can reproduce this behavior. In other words, they
showed that quantum correlations are nonlocal.
Researchers at the University of Science
and Technology of China, Institute of Photonic Sciences, Università della
Svizzera Italiana and Perimeter Institute of Theoretical Physics have recently
carried out an experimental study generalizing these findings, by considering
new potential theories. Their findings, published in Physical
Review Letters, suggest that the
correlations achieved by the tripartite-entangled state used in their
experiment cannot be explained by an hypothetical theory involving a
generalization of bipartite entanglement, called “exotic sources of two
particles,” in addition to a local hidden-variable theory.
“The main objective of our study was to
prove that the behavior of a three particle quantum source (e.g., a source of
three photons) cannot be reproduced by any new hypothetical theory (replacing
quantum theory, yet to be discovered) which only involves exotic pairs of two
particle described by new physical laws’ and a local hidden variable model,”
Marc-Olivier Renou, one of the authors of the paper, told Phys.org.
Gaël Massé, a second author, explains:
“To do this, we used the idea contained in the ‘inflation technique,’ invented
by Elie Wolfe, one of our coauthor. If we imagine a pair of two particles
described by new physical laws, then even if we have no idea how to describe
them we can still create a copy of this pair and make all the particles
interact together in a new way. While this technique seems elementary, it has
often proved to be a very powerful tool to address theoretical abstract
concepts.”
Credit:
Marya Kuderska
In their paper, the researchers first derived a new
device-independent witness that could falsify causal theories with bipartite
nonclassical resources. Then, through a lab experiment performed by Huan Cao and Chao Zhang, they
showed that some tripartite-entangled state (called the “GHZ state”) could
obtain, in practice, correlations that violate this witness.
“Using a high-performance photonic GHZ3 state with
fidelities of 0.9741±0.002, we provide a clear experimental violation of that
witness by more than 26.3 standard deviations, under the locality and fair
sampling assumption,” the team explained in their paper. “We generalize our
Letter to the |GHZ4⟩ state, obtaining correlations that cannot be
explained by any causal theory limited to tripartite nonclassical common causes
assisted with unlimited shared randomness.”
The recent work is a generalization of
Bell’s theorem. Its most remarkable achievement is that it reaches beyond what
physicists previously thought was possible in constraining potential
alternative theories to quantum theory.
Credit:
Marya Kuderska
“Bell ruled out the possibility that
quantum correlations can be explained by a local hidden variable model (i.e.,
shared randomness),” Xavier Coiteux-Roy, a coauthor of the study, explains. “We
went a bit further, by proving that even if you add ‘bipartite exotic sources’
in your theory, it still doesn’t work. In fact, we generalized the result,
showing that if you add tripartite, quadripartite, and other exotic sources, it
still doesn’t work. You really need to involve N-partite exotic sources for any
N, whatever high it is, as is done by quantum theory.” He concludes, “Note that
experiment has imperfections, called loopholes. Realizing an experiment without
these loopholes, in particular the post-selection loophole, is a great
challenge for experimentalists for the next years.”
Based on their findings, the team
concluded that nature’s correlations are genuinely multipartite nonlocal. The
experiments they carried out so far allowed them to definitively exclude
theories of bipartite and tripartite exotic sources, but they are now thinking
of evaluating other alternatives to quantum theory.
“We are now trying to understand how far this idea can go, and how far we can exclude potential alternatives to quantum theory by just looking at concrete experimental results, without assuming that they are explained by quantum theory,” Renou added. “This might eventually allow us to exclude all potential alternatives to quantum theory.”
Source: Phys.org
Journal article: https://journals.aps.org/prl/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevLett.129.150402
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