Publication | Open Access
Limit on Nonlocality in Any World in Which Communication Complexity Is Not Trivial
398
Citations
19
References
2006
Year
Computational Complexity TheoryEngineeringComputational ComplexityCommunication ComplexityCommunicationMeasurement ProblemNon-local InteractionQuantum ComputingStronger CorrelationsDescriptional ComplexityDiscrete MathematicsQuantum EntanglementQuantum ScienceWhich Communication ComplexityQuantum InformationComplexity TheoryQuantum DecoherenceImpossible CorrelationsGlobal CommunicationQuantum CommunicationAny WorldArts
Bell proved that quantum entanglement enables two spacelike separated parties to exhibit classically impossible correlations. Even though these correlations are stronger than anything classically achievable, they cannot be harnessed to make instantaneous (faster than light) communication possible. Yet, Popescu and Rohrlich have shown that even stronger correlations can be defined, under which instantaneous communication remains impossible. This raises the question: Why are the correlations achievable by quantum mechanics not maximal among those that preserve causality? We give a partial answer to this question by showing that slightly stronger correlations would result in a world in which communication complexity becomes trivial.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1