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Contextuality in composite systems: the role of entanglement in the Kochen-Specker theorem

Contextuality in composite systems: the role of entanglement in the Kochen-Specker theorem

  • Date15 Feb 2023
  • Time 15:00 - 16:00
  • Category Seminar

Dr Ravi Kunjwal, Université Libre de Bruxelles

The fact that quantum theory radically departs from 'classical lines of thought' is a critical driver for its applications in quantum information and computation. A famous example of this radical departure---this nonclassicality---is entanglement. Bell's theorem shows that shared entanglement can be used to generate correlations between non-communicating parties in ways that are impossible to do without communication if one only had access to classical shared randomness. In their very formulation, both entanglement and Bell's theorem are composite notions of nonclassicality, i.e., they require at least two parties to be meaningful. Another key notion of nonclassicality is contextuality that follows from the Kochen-Specker theorem: this notion is applicable to single systems. I will present some recent results on the interplay between contextuality and entanglement in composite systems and their consequences for our understanding of restricted models of multiqubit quantum computation with state injection that have been previously proposed.

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