Classical and quantum physics provide fundamentally different predictions about experiments with separate observers that do not communicate, a phenomenon known as quantum nonlocality. This insight is a key element of our present understanding of quantum physics, and also enables a number of information processing protocols with security beyond what is classically attainable. Relaxing the pivotal assumption of no communication leads to new insights into the nature quantum correlations, and may enable new applications where security can be established under less strict assumptions. Here, we study such relaxations where different forms of communication are allowed. We consider communication of inputs, outputs, and of a message between the part...
Determination of the quantum nature of correlations between two spatially separated systems plays a ...
Quantum correlations do not allow signaling, and any operation which may be performed on one system ...
What is the communication cost of simulating the correlations produced by quantum theory? We general...
In the first part of this thesis Bell's theorem is revisited. It points at a difference between the ...
We obtain optimal bounds for the problem of conveying classical messages by communication between a ...
We introduce new methods and tools to study and characterise classical and quantum correlations emer...
Despite the success of quantum mechanics in predicting the outcomes of experiments in many branches ...
The comparison of communication protocols using quantum messages with protocols using classical mess...
We obtain a general connection between a large quantum advantage in communication complexity and Bel...
Nonlocality is at the heart of quantum information processing. In this paper we investigate the mini...
We consider alternative models to quantum mechanics, that have been proposed in the recent years in ...
It has recently been shown that all causal correlations between two parties which output each one bi...
The possibility of Bell inequality violations in quantum theory had a profound impact on our underst...
Thesis: S.B., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Physics, 2016.Cataloged from PDF ...
We show that, assuming that quantum mechanics holds locally, the finite speed of information is the ...
Determination of the quantum nature of correlations between two spatially separated systems plays a ...
Quantum correlations do not allow signaling, and any operation which may be performed on one system ...
What is the communication cost of simulating the correlations produced by quantum theory? We general...
In the first part of this thesis Bell's theorem is revisited. It points at a difference between the ...
We obtain optimal bounds for the problem of conveying classical messages by communication between a ...
We introduce new methods and tools to study and characterise classical and quantum correlations emer...
Despite the success of quantum mechanics in predicting the outcomes of experiments in many branches ...
The comparison of communication protocols using quantum messages with protocols using classical mess...
We obtain a general connection between a large quantum advantage in communication complexity and Bel...
Nonlocality is at the heart of quantum information processing. In this paper we investigate the mini...
We consider alternative models to quantum mechanics, that have been proposed in the recent years in ...
It has recently been shown that all causal correlations between two parties which output each one bi...
The possibility of Bell inequality violations in quantum theory had a profound impact on our underst...
Thesis: S.B., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Physics, 2016.Cataloged from PDF ...
We show that, assuming that quantum mechanics holds locally, the finite speed of information is the ...
Determination of the quantum nature of correlations between two spatially separated systems plays a ...
Quantum correlations do not allow signaling, and any operation which may be performed on one system ...
What is the communication cost of simulating the correlations produced by quantum theory? We general...