A computational test of quantum contextuality, and even simpler proofs of quantumness
Atul Singh Arora, Kishor Bharti, Alexandru Cojocaru, Andrea, Coladangelo

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that quantum contextuality can be tested with a single quantum device using cryptographic methods to simulate spatial separation, leading to simpler proofs of quantumness.
Contribution
It introduces a method to convert any contextuality game into a single-device test using cryptography to enforce temporal separation, simplifying quantumness verification.
Findings
Any contextuality game can be compiled into a single-device test.
Cryptography enforces temporal separation in measurements.
The proposed proof of quantumness is simpler than existing methods.
Abstract
Bell non-locality is a fundamental feature of quantum mechanics whereby measurements performed on "spatially separated" quantum systems can exhibit correlations that cannot be understood as revealing predetermined values. This is a special case of the more general phenomenon of "quantum contextuality", which says that such correlations can occur even when the measurements are not necessarily on separate quantum systems, but are merely "compatible" (i.e. commuting). Crucially, while any non-local game yields an experiment that demonstrates quantum advantage by leveraging the "spatial separation" of two or more devices (and in fact several such demonstrations have been conducted successfully in recent years), the same is not true for quantum contextuality: finding the contextuality analogue of such an experiment is arguably one of the central open questions in the foundations of quantum…
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