Ravi Kunjwal (ULB, QuIC), Contextuality in composite systems: entanglement vs the Kochen-Specker theorem

Abstract: The Kochen-Specker (KS) theorem is often taken as a notion of nonclassicality that is independent of entanglement since it is provable on a three-dimensional Hilbert space. However, the smallest system on which both the KS theorem and entanglement are meaningful notions of nonclassicality is a two-qubit system. I will present some recent work on the necessity of entanglement in proofs of the KS theorem on multiqubit systems. We show two key results: firstly, that any proof of the KS theorem that uses KS sets necessarily requires entangled measurements, and secondly, that a statistical proof of the KS theorem with unentangled measurements on a multiqubit state exists if and only if this state can witness a Bell inequality violation. We also obtain an overall understanding of the relationship between unentangled Gleason and KS theorems on multiqudit systems in general. Time permitting, I will also discuss some implications of these results for the role of contextuality as a resource for multiqubit quantum computation with state injection.

Based on arXiv:2109.13594.

When: 8th November, 2022

Where: Luminy, room 04.05 of building TPR2. CaNa seminar. 

On Zoom : https://univ-amu-fr.zoom.us/j/81306877556?pwd=aUNoSTFsVkZSU1ZOQUptZnQ0SGJFUT09