Quantum correlations and causal structures
Issam Ibnouhsein

TL;DR
This paper explores the relationship between quantum correlations, causality, and relativistic invariance, addressing conceptual, theoretical, and foundational issues in quantum physics and quantum information.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the structure of nonlocal correlations, the effects of Poincare invariance on entanglement, and introduces a framework for correlations with indefinite causal order.
Findings
Quantum nonlocality has deep conceptual implications.
Poincare invariance affects entanglement detection and measures.
A framework predicts correlations with indefinite causal order.
Abstract
Recent works in foundations of quantum (field) theory and relativistic quantum information try to better grasp the interplay between the structure of quantum correlations and the constraints imposed by causality on physical operations. Chapter 1 is dedicated to the study of the conceptual implications of quantum nonlocality, a concept that subsumes that of entanglement in a certain way. We detail the recent information-theoretic approaches to understanding the structure of nonlocal correlations, and the issues the latter raise concerning the ability of local observers to isolate a system from its environment. Chapter 2 reviews in what sense imposing Poincare invariance affects entanglement detection and quantification procedures. This invariance ultimately forces a description of all quantum systems within the framework of quantum field theory, which leads to the impossibility of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Mechanics and Applications · Quantum Electrodynamics and Casimir Effect · Advanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics
