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The Wigner’s friend thought experiment has gained a resurgence of interest in recent years thanks to no-go theorems that extend it to Bell-like scenarios. One of these, by us and co-workers, showcased the contradiction that arises between quantum theory and a set of assumptions, weaker than those in Bell’s theorem, which we named ‘Local Friendliness’. Using these assumptions, it is possible to arrive at a set of inequalities for a given scenario, and, in general, some of these inequalities will be harder to violate than the Bell inequalities for the same scenario. A crucial feature of the extended Wigner’s friend scenario in our aforementioned work was the ability of a superobserver to reverse the unitary evolution that gives rise to their friend’s measurement. Here, we present a new scenario where the superobserver can interact with the friend repeatedly in a single experimental instance, either by asking them directly for their result, thus ending that instance, or by reversing their measurement and instructing them to perform a new one. We show that, in these scenarios, the Local Friendliness inequalities will always be the same as Bell inequalities.
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Aníbal Utreras-Alarcón
Eric G. Cavalcanti
Howard M. Wiseman
Proceedings of the Royal Society A Mathematical Physical and Engineering Sciences
Griffith University
Australian Research Council
Centre for Quantum Computation and Communication Technology
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Utreras-Alarcón et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/68e70f02b6db643587688b5e — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1098/rspa.2024.0040
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