Causal and causally separable processes
Ognyan Oreshkov, Christina Giarmatzi

TL;DR
This paper develops rigorous notions of causality and causal separability in quantum processes, exploring their properties, differences, and extensions, including multipartite scenarios and the effects of entangled ancillas.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive framework for causality and causal separability in multipartite quantum processes, including new concepts like extensibly causal processes and their characterizations.
Findings
Causality and causal separability are not equivalent in quantum processes.
Existence of causally separable processes that become non-causal when extended with entangled ancillas.
Classically controlled quantum circuits produce extensibly causal processes.
Abstract
We develop rigorous notions of causality and causal separability in the process framework introduced in [Oreshkov, Costa, Brukner, Nat. Commun. 3, 1092 (2012)], which describes correlations between separate local experiments without a prior assumption of causal order between them. We consider the general multipartite case and take into account the possibility for dynamical causal order, where the order of a set of events can depend on other events in the past. Starting from a general definition of causality, we derive an iteratively formulated canonical decomposition of multipartite causal processes, and show that for a fixed number of settings and outcomes for each party, the respective correlations form a polytope whose facets define causal inequalities. In the case of quantum processes, we investigate the link between causality and the theory-dependent notion of causal separability,…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
