Quantum Nonlocality under Latency Constraints

ORAL

Abstract

Bell inequality violation is the phenomenon where multiple non-communicating parties can exhibit correlations using quantum resources that are impossible if they can only use classical resources. One way to enforce non-communication is to apply a latency constraint: the parties must all produce outputs after they receive their inputs within a time window shorter than the speed of light delay between any pair of parties. If this latency constraint is relaxed so that a subset of the parties can communicate, we can obtain a new set of inequalities on correlations that extends Bell inequalities in a very natural way. Moreover, with this relaxed latency constraint, we can also have quantum communication between a subset of parties and thereby achieve possible quantum violations of these new inequalities. We ultimately wish to answer the fundamental question: "What are the physically realizable correlations between multiple parties under varying latency constraints?" To answer this question, we introduce latency-constrained games, a mathematical framework that extends nonlocal games to the setting where a subset of parties can communicate. The notion of latency-constrained games can have real-world applications, including high frequency trading, distributed computing, computer architecture, and distributed control systems.

Publication: arXiv (to be posted)

Presenters

  • Mingze Xu

    • Tsinghua University

Authors

  • Dawei Ding

    • Math & Interdisciplinary Sciences Center, Fudan University
  • Zhengfeng Ji

    • Tsinghua University
  • Pierre Pocreau

    • Université Grenoble Alpes
  • Mingze Xu

    • Tsinghua University
  • Xinyu Xu

    • Fudan University