Combining recent advances in superconducting quantum hardware, we explore quantum correlations in a previously inaccessible regime by observing \emph{simultaneously} high-dimensional and many-body Bell non-locality. We report a high-confidence Bell violation in the correlations between two d=64-dimensional systems encoded in twelve qubits. For system sizes up to d=32, the strength of the observed nonlocal correlations exceeds the quantum upper bound for d=2 systems, providing direct evidence of high-dimensional nonlocality. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the observed violation is genuinely collective: all qubits contribute to the nonlocal correlations, while most pairwise correlations across the bipartition remain Bell-local. Our work illustrates how present-day quantum processors enable the exploration of fundamental predictions of quantum mechanics in previously inaccessible regimes and, in turn, how fundamental quantum effects can be used to benchmark their performance.
@article{arxiv.2604.24740,
title = {Experimental high-dimensional multi-qubit Bell non-locality on a superconducting quantum processor},
author = {Yousef Mafi and Ali G. Moghaddam and Teemu Ojanen},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2604.24740},
year = {2026}
}