Three-Particle Quantum Nonlocality under Strict Locality Conditions

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Discussion Overview

The discussion centers on a recent paper regarding three-particle quantum nonlocality under strict locality conditions, specifically focusing on the experimental closure of locality and freedom-of-choice loopholes in the context of Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger (GHZ) states. The implications for quantum mechanics and multi-party quantum communication protocols are also considered.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants highlight that the paper reports the closure of locality and freedom-of-choice loopholes, referencing the complexity of the experimental setup and the significance of the results.
  • Others point out that the paper does not close the detection loophole, which has been addressed in a separate experiment involving ions.
  • A participant questions the method used to close the freedom-of-choice loophole, raising concerns about the implications of superdeterminism and its potential unfalsifiability.
  • There is a reiteration of the point that the paper only addresses the locality and freedom-of-choice loopholes, with agreement from multiple participants on this interpretation.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants generally agree that the paper closes the locality and freedom-of-choice loopholes but disagree on the implications and the status of the detection loophole, which remains unresolved in this context.

Contextual Notes

The discussion reflects varying interpretations of the experimental results and the definitions of the loopholes addressed, indicating a need for clarity on the assumptions and implications of the findings.

DrChinese
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Just posted to the archives is a great new paper from a top experimental team. These are some of the same individuals that performed the now standard citation regarding a Bell test under strict locality conditions. They have now extended their concept to GHZ states, and also close the Detection loophole while they are at it.

http://arxiv.org/abs/1309.1379

Experimental Three-Particle Quantum Nonlocality under Strict Locality Conditions

C. Erven, E. Meyer-Scott, K. Fisher, J. Lavoie, B. L. Higgins, Z. Yan, C. J. Pugh, J.-P. Bourgoin, R. Prevedel, L. K. Shalm, L. Richards, N. Gigov, R. Laflamme, G. Weihs, T. Jennewein, K. J. Resch
(Submitted on 5 Sep 2013)

"Quantum correlations are critical to our understanding of nature, with far-reaching technological and fundamental impact. These often manifest as violations of Bell's inequalities, bounds derived from the assumptions of locality and realism, concepts integral to classical physics. Many tests of Bell's inequalities have studied pairs of correlated particles; however, the immense interest in multi-particle quantum correlations is driving the experimental frontier to test systems beyond just pairs. All experimental violations of Bell's inequalities to date require supplementary assumptions, opening the results to one or more loopholes, the closing of which is one of the most important challenges in quantum science. Individual loopholes have been closed in experiments with pairs of particles and a very recent result closed the detection loophole in a six ion experiment. No experiment thus far has closed the locality loopholes with three or more particles. Here, we distribute three-photon Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger entangled states using optical fibre and free-space links to independent measurement stations. The measured correlations constitute a test of Mermin's inequality while closing both the locality and related freedom-of-choice loopholes due to our experimental configuration and timing. We measured a Mermin parameter of 2.77 +/- 0.08, violating the inequality bound of 2 by over 9 standard deviations, with minimum tolerances for the locality and freedom-of-choice loopholes of 264 +/- 28 ns and 304 +/- 25 ns, respectively. These results represent a significant advance towards definitive tests of the foundations of quantum mechanics and practical multi-party quantum communications protocols."

The write up features some tremendous detail on the setup, which is quite complex. Nice diagrams too. They "report the experimental violation of the three-particle Mermin’s inequality closing both the locality and freedom-of-choice loopholes, having to make only the fair-sampling assumption." GHZ experiments are interesting because each individual trial is expected to yield a result in conflict with local realistic descriptions. Bell tests, by contrast, show this conflict only as a statistical difference over a large number of trials.

Enjoy!
 
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I think they only close the locality and freedom of choice loopholes. They make reference to another experiment that closed the detection loophole, using ions.
 
How did they close the freedom of choice loophole? Isn't superdetermnism unfalsifiable?
 
StevieTNZ said:
I think they only close the locality and freedom of choice loopholes. They make reference to another experiment that closed the detection loophole, using ions.

fully concur.


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