Naturally restricted subsets of nonsignaling correlations: typicality and convergence
Pei-Sheng Lin, Tam\'as V\'ertesi, Yeong-Cherng Liang

TL;DR
This paper investigates the relative sizes and differences of various restricted sets of nonsignaling correlations in bipartite Bell scenarios, revealing how these sets compare and where quantum violations are most significant.
Contribution
It provides a numerical analysis of the volume and approximation quality of different subsets of quantum correlations, highlighting their relationships and differences in various Bell scenarios.
Findings
Quantum set volume increases with more outputs and decreases with more inputs.
Macroscopically local set approximates quantum set well only in two-input scenarios.
Almost-quantum set closely approximates the quantum set.
Abstract
It is well-known that in a Bell experiment, the observed correlation between measurement outcomes -- as predicted by quantum theory -- can be stronger than that allowed by local causality, yet not fully constrained by the principle of relativistic causality. In practice, the characterization of the set of quantum correlations is carried out, often, through a converging hierarchy of outer approximations. On the other hand, some subsets of arising from additional constraints [e.g., originating from quantum states having positive-partial-transposition (PPT) or being finite-dimensional maximally entangled (MES)] turn out to be also amenable to similar numerical characterizations. How, then, at a quantitative level, are all these naturally restricted subsets of nonsignaling correlations different? Here, we consider several bipartite Bell scenarios and numerically estimate their…
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