A macroscopic quantum three-box paradox: finding consistency with weak macroscopic realism
C. Hatharasinghe, M. Thenabadu, P. D. Drummond, M. D. Reid

TL;DR
This paper constructs a macroscopic version of the quantum three-box paradox, demonstrating its consistency with weak macroscopic realism and analyzing its implications for non-invasive measurements and Leggett-Garg inequalities.
Contribution
It introduces a macroscopic paradox consistent with weak macroscopic realism, bridging quantum paradoxes with classical realism concepts.
Findings
The paradox aligns with quantum mechanics under weak macroscopic realism.
The paradox involves both local and nonlocal operations during shuffling.
Violation of Leggett-Garg inequality indicates non-invasive measurability is challenged.
Abstract
The quantum three-box paradox considers a ball prepared in a superposition of being in one of three Boxes. Bob makes measurements by opening either Box 1 or Box 2. After performing some unitary operations (shuffling), Alice can infer with certainty that the ball was detected by Bob, regardless of which box he opened, if she detects the ball after opening Box 3. The paradox is that the ball would have been found with certainty in either box, if that box had been opened. Resolutions of the paradox include that Bob's measurement cannot be made non-invasively, or else that realism cannot be assumed at the quantum level. Here, we strengthen the case for the former argument, by constructing macroscopic versions of the paradox. Macroscopic realism implies that the ball is in one of the boxes, prior to Bob or Alice opening any boxes. We demonstrate consistency of the paradox with macroscopic…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Mechanics and Applications · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Quantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture
