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      Specker's Parable of the Over-protective Seer: A Road to Contextuality, Nonlocality and Complementarity (PLUS AN ERRATUM)

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          Abstract

          In 1960, the mathematician Ernst Specker described a simple example of nonclassical correlations which he dramatized using a parable about a seer who sets an impossible prediction task to his daughter's suitors. We revisit this example here, using it as an entree to three central concepts in quantum foundations: contextuality, Bell-nonlocality, and complementarity. Specifically, we show that Specker's parable offers a narrative thread that weaves together a large number of results, including: the impossibility of measurement-noncontextual and outcome-deterministic ontological models of quantum theory (the Kochen-Specker theorem), in particular the proof of Klyachko; the impossibility of Bell-local models of quantum theory (Bell's theorem), especially the proofs by Mermin and Hardy; the impossibility of a preparation-noncontextual ontological model of quantum theory; and the existence of triples of positive operator valued measures (POVMs) that can be measured jointly pairwise but not triplewise. Along the way, several novel results are presented, including: a generalization of a theorem by Fine connecting the existence of a joint distribution over outcomes of counterfactual measurements to the existence of a noncontextual model; a generalization of Klyachko's proof of the Kochen-Specker theorem; a proof of the Kochen-Specker theorem in the style of Hardy's proof of Bell's theorem; a categorization of contextual and Bell-nonlocal correlations in terms of frustrated networks; a new inequality testing preparation noncontextuality; and lastly, some results on the joint measurability of POVMs and the question of whether these can be modeled noncontextually. Finally, we emphasize that Specker's parable provides a novel type of foil to quantum theory, challenging us to explain why the particular sort of contextuality and complementarity embodied therein does not arise in a quantum world.

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          The uncertainty principle determines the non-locality of quantum mechanics

          Two central concepts of quantum mechanics are Heisenberg's uncertainty principle, and a subtle form of non-locality that Einstein famously called ``spooky action at a distance''. These two fundamental features have thus far been distinct concepts. Here we show that they are inextricably and quantitatively linked. Quantum mechanics cannot be more non-local with measurements that respect the uncertainty principle. In fact, the link between uncertainty and non-locality holds for all physical theories.More specifically, the degree of non-locality of any theory is determined by two factors -- the strength of the uncertainty principle, and the strength of a property called ``steering'', which determines which states can be prepared at one location given a measurement at another.
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            DIE LOGIK NICHT GLEICHZEITIG ENTSC HEIDBARER AUSSAGEN

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              Author and article information

              Journal
              2010-10-06
              2016-12-27
              Article
              10.1016/j.physrep.2011.05.001 10.1016/j.physrep.2016.12.001
              1010.1273
              40fd8dcc-1061-4685-9955-26aba9662e2e

              http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

              History
              Custom metadata
              Physics Reports, vol 506, issues 1-2, pp 1-39 (2011)
              34 pages, 14 figures, published version formatted in revtex with two columns + a 2-page erratum that relates to Sec. VII of the original paper, also formatted in revtex
              quant-ph

              Quantum physics & Field theory
              Quantum physics & Field theory

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