Explicit lower and upper bounds on the entangled value of multiplayer XOR games (Q356692): Difference between revisions
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From the text: ``The study of quantum-mechanical violations of Bell inequalities is motivated by the investigation, and the eventual demonstration, of the nonlocal properties of entanglement.'' Bell inequalities have found ``a re-formulation using the language of multiplayer games originating from computer science. This paper studies the nonlocal properties of entanglement in the context of the simplest such games, called XOR games. When there are two players, it is known that the maximum bias -- the advantage over random play -- of players using entanglement can be at most a constant times greater than that of classical players. Recently, \textit{D. Pérez-García} et al. [Commun. Math. Phys. 279, No. 2, 455--486 (2008; Zbl 1157.81008)] showed that no such bound holds when there are three or more players: the use of entanglement can provide an unbounded advantage, and scale with the number of questions in the game.'' The authors give a new and improved proof of the existence of a family of three-player XOR games for which the QC-gap is unbounded. In turn, this implies the existence of tripartite Bell correlation inequalities that exhibit arbitrarily large violation in quantum mechanics. The proof technique uses the probabilistic method. | |||
Property / review text: From the text: ``The study of quantum-mechanical violations of Bell inequalities is motivated by the investigation, and the eventual demonstration, of the nonlocal properties of entanglement.'' Bell inequalities have found ``a re-formulation using the language of multiplayer games originating from computer science. This paper studies the nonlocal properties of entanglement in the context of the simplest such games, called XOR games. When there are two players, it is known that the maximum bias -- the advantage over random play -- of players using entanglement can be at most a constant times greater than that of classical players. Recently, \textit{D. Pérez-García} et al. [Commun. Math. Phys. 279, No. 2, 455--486 (2008; Zbl 1157.81008)] showed that no such bound holds when there are three or more players: the use of entanglement can provide an unbounded advantage, and scale with the number of questions in the game.'' The authors give a new and improved proof of the existence of a family of three-player XOR games for which the QC-gap is unbounded. In turn, this implies the existence of tripartite Bell correlation inequalities that exhibit arbitrarily large violation in quantum mechanics. The proof technique uses the probabilistic method. / rank | |||
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Property / reviewed by | |||
Property / reviewed by: Ahmed Sadek Hegazi / rank | |||
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID | |||
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 91A44 / rank | |||
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID | |||
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 81P40 / rank | |||
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID | |||
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 91A06 / rank | |||
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Property / zbMATH DE Number | |||
Property / zbMATH DE Number: 6192123 / rank | |||
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Property / zbMATH Keywords | |||
multiplayer XOR games | |||
Property / zbMATH Keywords: multiplayer XOR games / rank | |||
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QC-gap | |||
Property / zbMATH Keywords: QC-gap / rank | |||
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unbounded gaps | |||
Property / zbMATH Keywords: unbounded gaps / rank | |||
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entangled strategy | |||
Property / zbMATH Keywords: entangled strategy / rank | |||
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maximal QC-gap | |||
Property / zbMATH Keywords: maximal QC-gap / rank | |||
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Grothendieck inequality | |||
Property / zbMATH Keywords: Grothendieck inequality / rank | |||
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finite entanglement | |||
Property / zbMATH Keywords: finite entanglement / rank | |||
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Grothendieck constant | |||
Property / zbMATH Keywords: Grothendieck constant / rank | |||
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upper bound on quantum violation | |||
Property / zbMATH Keywords: upper bound on quantum violation / rank | |||
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Khinchine inequality | |||
Property / zbMATH Keywords: Khinchine inequality / rank | |||
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probabilistic method | |||
Property / zbMATH Keywords: probabilistic method / rank | |||
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Revision as of 09:37, 28 June 2023
scientific article
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English | Explicit lower and upper bounds on the entangled value of multiplayer XOR games |
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Explicit lower and upper bounds on the entangled value of multiplayer XOR games (English)
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26 July 2013
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From the text: ``The study of quantum-mechanical violations of Bell inequalities is motivated by the investigation, and the eventual demonstration, of the nonlocal properties of entanglement.'' Bell inequalities have found ``a re-formulation using the language of multiplayer games originating from computer science. This paper studies the nonlocal properties of entanglement in the context of the simplest such games, called XOR games. When there are two players, it is known that the maximum bias -- the advantage over random play -- of players using entanglement can be at most a constant times greater than that of classical players. Recently, \textit{D. Pérez-García} et al. [Commun. Math. Phys. 279, No. 2, 455--486 (2008; Zbl 1157.81008)] showed that no such bound holds when there are three or more players: the use of entanglement can provide an unbounded advantage, and scale with the number of questions in the game.'' The authors give a new and improved proof of the existence of a family of three-player XOR games for which the QC-gap is unbounded. In turn, this implies the existence of tripartite Bell correlation inequalities that exhibit arbitrarily large violation in quantum mechanics. The proof technique uses the probabilistic method.
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multiplayer XOR games
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QC-gap
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unbounded gaps
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entangled strategy
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maximal QC-gap
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Grothendieck inequality
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finite entanglement
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Grothendieck constant
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upper bound on quantum violation
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Khinchine inequality
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probabilistic method
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