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  • A strong no-go theorem on the Wigner’s friend paradox

    Author(s)
    Bong, Kok-Wei
    Utreras-Alarcón, Aníbal
    Ghafari, Farzad
    Liang, Yeong-Cherng
    Tischler, Nora
    Cavalcanti, Eric G
    Pryde, Geoff J
    Wiseman, Howard M
    Griffith University Author(s)
    Cavalcanti, Eric G.
    Tischler, Nora
    Pryde, Geoff
    Wiseman, Howard M.
    Bong, Kok-Wei
    Utreras-Alarcon, Anibal A.
    Ghafari Jouneghani, Farzad
    Year published
    2020
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    Does quantum theory apply at all scales, including that of observers? New light on this fundamental question has recently been shed through a resurgence of interest in the long-standing Wigner’s friend paradox. This is a thought experiment addressing the quantum measurement problem—the difficulty of reconciling the (unitary, deterministic) evolution of isolated systems and the (non-unitary, probabilistic) state update after a measurement. Here, by building on a scenario with two separated but entangled friends introduced by Brukner, we prove that if quantum evolution is controllable on the scale of an observer, then one of ...
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    Does quantum theory apply at all scales, including that of observers? New light on this fundamental question has recently been shed through a resurgence of interest in the long-standing Wigner’s friend paradox. This is a thought experiment addressing the quantum measurement problem—the difficulty of reconciling the (unitary, deterministic) evolution of isolated systems and the (non-unitary, probabilistic) state update after a measurement. Here, by building on a scenario with two separated but entangled friends introduced by Brukner, we prove that if quantum evolution is controllable on the scale of an observer, then one of ‘No-Superdeterminism’, ‘Locality’ or ‘Absoluteness of Observed Events’—that every observed event exists absolutely, not relatively—must be false. We show that although the violation of Bell-type inequalities in such scenarios is not in general sufficient to demonstrate the contradiction between those three assumptions, new inequalities can be derived, in a theory-independent manner, that are violated by quantum correlations. This is demonstrated in a proof-of-principle experiment where a photon’s path is deemed an observer. We discuss how this new theorem places strictly stronger constraints on physical reality than Bell’s theorem.
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    Journal Title
    Nature Physics
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.1038/s41567-020-0990-x
    Note
    This publication has been entered as an advanced online version in Griffith Research Online.
    Subject
    Mathematical Sciences
    Physical Sciences
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/399717
    Collection
    • Journal articles

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