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Causal hierarchy of multipartite Bell nonlocality
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As with entanglement, different forms of Bell nonlocality arise in the multipartite scenario. These can be defined in terms of relaxations of the causal assumptions in local hidden-variable theories. However, a characterisation of all the forms of multipartite nonlocality has until now been out of reach, mainly due to the complexity of generic multipartite causal models. Here, we employ the formalism of Bayesian networks to reveal connections among different causal structures that make a both practical and physically meaningful classification possible. Our framework holds for arbitrarily many parties. We apply it to study the tripartite scenario in detail, where we fully characterize all the nonlocality classes. Remarkably, we identify new highly nonlocal causal structures that cannot reproduce all quantum correlations. This shows, to our knowledge, the strongest form of quantum multipartite nonlocality known to date. Finally, as a by-product result, we derive a non-trivial Bell-type inequality with no quantum violation. Our findings constitute a significant step forward in the understanding of multipartite Bell nonlocality and open several venues for future research.
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Title: Causal hierarchy of multipartite Bell nonlocality
Description:
As with entanglement, different forms of Bell nonlocality arise in the multipartite scenario.
These can be defined in terms of relaxations of the causal assumptions in local hidden-variable theories.
However, a characterisation of all the forms of multipartite nonlocality has until now been out of reach, mainly due to the complexity of generic multipartite causal models.
Here, we employ the formalism of Bayesian networks to reveal connections among different causal structures that make a both practical and physically meaningful classification possible.
Our framework holds for arbitrarily many parties.
We apply it to study the tripartite scenario in detail, where we fully characterize all the nonlocality classes.
Remarkably, we identify new highly nonlocal causal structures that cannot reproduce all quantum correlations.
This shows, to our knowledge, the strongest form of quantum multipartite nonlocality known to date.
Finally, as a by-product result, we derive a non-trivial Bell-type inequality with no quantum violation.
Our findings constitute a significant step forward in the understanding of multipartite Bell nonlocality and open several venues for future research.
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