Mermin Non-Locality in Abstract Process Theories
Stefano Gogioso (University of Oxford), William Zeng (University of, Oxford)

TL;DR
This paper generalizes Mermin non-locality within abstract process theories, identifying key algebraic phases that determine non-locality, and explores broader measurement scenarios beyond traditional complementary observables.
Contribution
It provides necessary and sufficient conditions for Mermin non-locality in abstract theories, extending the understanding of non-locality beyond quantum mechanics.
Findings
fRel model is Mermin local
Non-locality depends on algebraically non-trivial phases
Broader measurement scenarios can exhibit non-locality
Abstract
The study of non-locality is fundamental to the understanding of quantum mechanics. The past 50 years have seen a number of non-locality proofs, but its fundamental building blocks, and the exact role it plays in quantum protocols, has remained elusive. In this paper, we focus on a particular flavour of non-locality, generalising Mermin's argument on the GHZ state. Using strongly complementary observables, we provide necessary and sufficient conditions for Mermin non-locality in abstract process theories. We show that the existence of more phases than classical points (aka eigenstates) is not sufficient, and that the key to Mermin non-locality lies in the presence of certain algebraically non-trivial phases. This allows us to show that fRel, a favourite toy model for categorical quantum mechanics, is Mermin local. We show Mermin non-locality to be the key resource ensuring the…
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