Mapping indefinite causal order processes to composable quantum protocols in a spacetime
Matthias Salzger, V. Vilasini

TL;DR
This paper bridges the gap between indefinite causal order processes and spacetime-compatible quantum protocols by mapping higher order quantum processes to causal boxes, revealing how physical experiment composability aligns with spacetime causality.
Contribution
It demonstrates that indefinite causal order processes can be represented as fine-grainings of spacetime-compatible quantum protocols, clarifying their physical realizability and composability.
Findings
Every QC-QC maps to a causal box satisfying setup assumptions
Fine-graining of QC-QC reveals a well-defined acyclic causal order
Highlights the role of relativistic causality and Fock space in process composition
Abstract
Formalisms for higher order quantum processes provide a theoretical formalisation of quantum processes where the order of agents' operations need not be definite and acyclic, but may be subject to quantum superpositions. This has led to the concept of indefinite causal structures (ICS) which have garnered much interest. However, the interface between these information-theoretic approaches and spatiotemporal notions of causality is less understood, and questions relating to the physical realisability of ICS in a spatiotemporal context persist despite progress in their information-theoretic characterisation. Further, previous work suggests that composition of processes is not so straightforward in ICS frameworks, which raises the question of how this connects with the observed composability of physical experiments in spacetime. To address these points, we compare the formalism of quantum…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Quantum Mechanics and Applications
