Sequential quantum nonlocality sharing under local noisy quantum channels

Abstract

Sequential sharing of quantum nonlocality (SSQN) is crucial for device-independent tasks in quantum information processing, wherein relaying the post-measurement qubit through a local quantum channel to a subsequent observer constitutes an essential operational step. Here we present a theoretical analysis of noise robustness of sequential sharing for bipartite Bell and tripartite Mermin nonlocality under the influence of local phase-flip, bit-flip, and depolarizing quantum channels. It is proved that arbitrarily many independent observers can sequentially share the quantum nonlocality of Bell, Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger, and W states via respective noise-immune channels, whereas such unbound feature of SSQN is lost under other local noisy quantum channels. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the noise-immune channel enabling unbounded SSQN can be switched by employing our newly designed measurement strategies assisted by local unitary operations on the initial entangled states. Moreover, as illustrative examples of noise robustness, we propose two concrete schemes for sharing Bell and Mermin nonlocality with two sequential local observers on one side subject to local noisy channels. Our work establishes a practical framework for realizing the SSQN under noisy quantum channels, and reveals the connection between noise robustness and measurement strategies.

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