Light polarization measurements in tests of macrorealism
Eugenio Rold\'an, Johannes Kofler, and Carlos Navarrete-Benlloch

TL;DR
This paper proposes a method to test macrorealism using light polarization measurements, demonstrating how measurement precision affects violations of macrorealism, bridging microscopic and macroscopic quantum phenomena.
Contribution
It introduces a setup using polarization measurements on light to test macrorealism, incorporating coarse-graining effects and ensuring non-invasiveness for certain states.
Findings
Violations of macrorealism can be minimized with coarse measurements.
Sharp measurements can lead to significant macrorealism violations.
The approach links microscopic quantum properties with macroscopic observations.
Abstract
According to the world view of macrorealism, the properties of a given system exist prior to and independent of measurement, which is incompatible with quantum mechanics. Leggett and Garg put forward a practical criterion capable of identifying violations of macrorealism, and so far experiments performed on microscopic and mesoscopic systems have always ruled out in favor of quantum mechanics. However, a macrorealist can always assign the cause of such violations to the perturbation that measurements effect on such small systems, and hence a definitive test would require using non-invasive measurements, preferably on macroscopic objects, where such measurements seem more plausible. However, the generation of truly macroscopic quantum superposition states capable of violating macrorealism remains a big challenge. In this work we propose a setup that makes use of measurements on the…
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