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Measurement-dependence cost for Bell nonlocality: Causal versus retrocausal models

Authors

Hall, Michael J. W.
Branciard, Cyril

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American Physical Society

Abstract

Device-independent protocols based on Bell nonlocality, such as quantum key distribution and randomness generation, must ensure no adversary can have prior knowledge of the measurement outcomes. This requires a measurement independence assumption: that the choice of measurement is uncorrelated with any other underlying variables that influence the measurement outcomes. Conversely, relaxing measurement independence allows for a fully "causal"simulation of Bell nonlocality. We construct the most efficient such simulation, as measured by the mutual information between the underlying variables and the measurement settings, for the Clauser-Horne-Shimony-Holt (CHSH) scenario, and find that the maximal quantum violation requires a mutual information of just ∼0.080 bits. Any physical device built to implement this simulation allows an adversary to have full knowledge of a cryptographic key or "random"numbers generated by a device-independent protocol based on violation of the CHSH inequality. We also show that a previous model for the CHSH scenario, requiring only ∼0.046 bits to simulate the maximal quantum violation, corresponds to the most efficient "retrocausal"simulation, in which future measurement settings necessarily influence earlier source variables. This may be viewed either as an unphysical limitation of the prior model or as an argument for retrocausality on the grounds of its greater efficiency. Causal and retrocausal models are also discussed for maximally entangled two-qubit states, as well as superdeterministic, one-sided, and zigzag causal models.

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Physical Review A

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Open Access

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