Decidability of fully quantum nonlocal games with noisy maximally entangled states
Minglong Qin, Penghui Yao

TL;DR
This paper shows that when shared entangled states in fully quantum nonlocal games are noisy, it becomes decidable to approximate their quantum value, contrasting with the undecidability in the noiseless case.
Contribution
It introduces a computable upper bound on the number of noisy maximally entangled states needed to approximate the quantum value, demonstrating noise can make the problem decidable.
Findings
Decidability of quantum value approximation with noisy states
Extension of Fourier analysis to super-operators
Development of invariance principle and dimension reduction for super-operators
Abstract
This paper considers the decidability of fully quantum nonlocal games with noisy maximally entangled states. Fully quantum nonlocal games are a generalization of nonlocal games, where both questions and answers are quantum and the referee performs a binary POVM measurement to decide whether they win the game after receiving the quantum answers from the players. The quantum value of a fully quantum nonlocal game is the supremum of the probability that they win the game, where the supremum is taken over all the possible entangled states shared between the players and all the valid quantum operations performed by the players. The seminal work implies that it is undecidable to approximate the quantum value of a fully nonlocal game. This still holds even if the players are only allowed to share (arbitrarily many copies of) maximally entangled states. This paper…
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