How typical is contextuality?
Vinicius P. Rossi, Beata Zjawin, Roberto D. Baldij\~ao, David Schmid, John H. Selby, Ana Bel\'en Sainz

TL;DR
This paper investigates how common quantum contextuality is in typical experimental setups, finding it to be quite prevalent even under realistic noise conditions, with implications for quantum advantage applications.
Contribution
The study introduces a numerical framework to assess the likelihood of contextuality in quantum experiments and provides an open-source toolbox for experimental design.
Findings
Contextuality occurs with over 99% probability in modest experiments.
The typicality of contextuality decreases with noise but remains significant.
High degrees of contextuality are less common than minimal ones.
Abstract
Identifying when observed statistics cannot be explained by any reasonable classical model is a central problem in quantum foundations. A principled and universally applicable approach to defining and identifying nonclassicality is given by the notion of generalized noncontextuality. Here, we study the typicality of contextuality -- namely, the likelihood that randomly chosen quantum preparations and measurements produce nonclassical statistics. Using numerical linear programs to test for the existence of a generalized-noncontextual model, we find that contextuality is fairly common: even in experiments with only a modest number of random preparations and measurements, contextuality arises with probability over 99%. We also show that while typicality of contextuality decreases as the purity (sharpness) of the preparations (measurements) decreases, this dependence is not especially…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Mechanics and Applications · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Quantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture
