In bipartite processes and multipartite quantum circuits with quantum control, causal nonseparability persists when any single non-future system remains undephased but becomes separable if all systems or only the future system is undephased.
On the definition and characterisation of multipartite causal (non)separability
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abstract
The concept of causal nonseparability has been recently introduced, in opposition to that of causal separability, to qualify physical processes that locally abide by the laws of quantum theory, but cannot be embedded in a well-defined global causal structure. While the definition is unambiguous in the bipartite case, its generalisation to the multipartite case is not so straightforward. Two seemingly different generalisations have been proposed, one for a restricted tripartite scenario and one for the general multipartite case. Here we compare the two, showing that they are in fact inequivalent. We propose our own definition of causal (non)separability for the general case, which---although a priori subtly different---turns out to be equivalent to the concept of "extensible causal (non)separability" introduced before, and which we argue is a more natural definition for general multipartite scenarios. We then derive necessary, as well as sufficient conditions to characterise causally (non)separable processes in practice. These allow one to devise practical tests, by generalising the tool of witnesses of causal nonseparability.
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quant-ph 1years
2026 1verdicts
UNVERDICTED 1representative citing papers
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How many systems can be dephased before the quantum switch becomes causally definite?
In bipartite processes and multipartite quantum circuits with quantum control, causal nonseparability persists when any single non-future system remains undephased but becomes separable if all systems or only the future system is undephased.