English

Multi-Party Pseudo-Telepathy

Quantum Physics 2015-06-29 v1

Abstract

Quantum entanglement, perhaps the most non-classical manifestation of quantum information theory, cannot be used to transmit information between remote parties. Yet, it can be used to reduce the amount of communication required to process a variety of distributed computational tasks. We speak of pseudo-telepathy when quantum entanglement serves to eliminate the classical need to communicate. In earlier examples of pseudo-telepathy, classical protocols could succeed with high probability unless the inputs were very large. Here we present a simple multi-party distributed problem for which the inputs and outputs consist of a single bit per player, and we present a perfect quantum protocol for it. We prove that no classical protocol can succeed with a probability that differs from 1/2 by more than a fraction that is exponentially small in the number of players. This could be used to circumvent the detection loophole in experimental tests of nonlocality.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.quant-ph/0306042,
  title  = {Multi-Party Pseudo-Telepathy},
  author = {Gilles Brassard and Anne Broadbent and Alain Tapp},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:quant-ph/0306042},
  year   = {2015}
}

Comments

11 pages. To be appear in WADS 2003 proceedings