Experimental non-classicality of an indivisible quantum system

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Abstract

In contrast to classical physics, quantum theory demands that not all properties can be simultaneously well defined; the Heisenberg uncertainty principle is a manifestation of this fact. Alternatives have been explored - notably theories relying on joint probability distributions or non-contextual hidden-variable models, in which the properties of a system are defined independently of their own measurement and any other measurements that are made. Various deep theoretical results2-5 imply that such theories are in conflict with quantum mechanics. Simpler cases demonstrating this conflict have been found6-10 and tested experimentally11-12 with pairs of quantum bits (qubits). Recently, an inequality satisfied by non-contextual hidden-variable models and violated by quantum mechanics for all states of two qubits was introduced13 and tested experimentally11-12. A single three-state system (a qutrit) is the simplest system in which such a contradiction is possible; moreover, the contradiction cannot result from entanglement between subsystems, because such a three-state system is indivisible. Here we report an experiment with single photonic qutrits 17,18 which provides evidence that no joint probability distribution describing the outcomes of all possible measurements - and, therefore, no non-contextual theory - can exist. Specifically, we observe a violation of the Bell-type inequality found by Klyachko, Can, Binicioǧlu and Shumovsky. Our results illustrate a deep incompatibility between quantum mechanics and classical physics that cannot in any way result from entanglement. © 2011 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.

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Lapkiewicz, R., Li, P., Schaeff, C., Langford, N. K., Ramelow, S., Wieśniak, M., & Zeilinger, A. (2011). Experimental non-classicality of an indivisible quantum system. Nature, 474(7352), 490–493. https://doi.org/10.1038/nature10119

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