Toward an Experimental Device-Independent Verification of Indefinite Causal Order
Carla M. D. Richter, Michael Antesberger, Huan Cao, Philip Walther, Lee A. Rozema

TL;DR
This paper reports the first experimental violation of a Bell-like inequality for device-independent verification of indefinite causal order, demonstrating quantum superpositions of causal sequences.
Contribution
It implements a novel, fully device-independent protocol to verify indefinite causal order, advancing experimental tests beyond previous device-dependent methods.
Findings
Measured a value of 1.8328 ± 0.0045, surpassing the classical bound of 1.75.
Achieved an 18-standard-deviation violation of the causal order inequality.
First experimental demonstration of a device-independent verification of indefinite causal order.
Abstract
In classical physics, events follow a definite causal order: the past influences the future, but not the reverse. Quantum theory, however, permits superpositions of causal orders -- so-called indefinite causal orders -- which can provide operational advantages over classical scenarios. Verifying such phenomena has sparked significant interest, much like earlier efforts devoted to refuting local realism and confirming quantum entanglement. To date, demonstrations of indefinite causal order have all been based a process called the quantum switch and have relied on device-dependent or semi-device-independent protocols. Achieving a device-independent verification of indefinite causal order would imply that nature allows for correlations that do not respect causality, independent of any experimental assumptions or underlying theoretical description of the experiment. To this end, a recent…
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