Measuring Bell non-locality in the presence of signaling
Mark Broom, Talel Naccache, Emmanuel M. Pothos, Christoph Gallus, Pawel Blasiak

TL;DR
This paper introduces a linear-programming based method to quantify Bell non-locality in scenarios with signaling, relaxing the non-signaling assumption and broadening the analysis of quantum correlations.
Contribution
It provides a general, closed-form solution for measuring Bell non-locality with signaling, extending the traditional non-signaling framework.
Findings
The method works for arbitrary correlations.
Signaling measures reveal non-trivial non-locality.
Framework applicable beyond physics contexts.
Abstract
Scientific inquiry seeks causal explanations of observed phenomena. The Bell experiment provides a paradigmatic case, revealing correlations between spatially separated systems that no local model can reproduce. Such correlations, known as Bell non-locality, are typically analyzed under the non-signaling assumption, which requires that local statistics be independent of distant measurement choices. Yet real experiments, as well as applications beyond physics, often involve signaling, raising the question of how non-locality should be characterized without this constraint. We introduce a general method for quantifying Bell non-locality in the presence of signaling, designed to relax locality as little as necessary. Our approach is guided by the question: how often can locality be preserved across repeated trials in explaining the observed correlations? The task reduces to finding the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Mechanics and Applications · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Philosophy and History of Science
