Are simultaneous Bell measurements possible?

All experimental tests of Bell-type inequalities and Greenberger–Horne–Zeilinger setups rely on the separate and successive measurement of the terms involved. We discuss possibilities of experimental setups to measure all relevant terms simultaneously in a single experiment and find this to be impossible. One reason is the lack of multi-partite states which are unique in the sense that a measurement of some observable on one particle fixes the value of the corresponding observables of the other particles as well.

One motivation for the beautiful Bell-type experiment by Weihs et al. [1] has been concerns [2] about the implicit coincidence between photon flight time and the specific switching frequency chosen in one of the first experiments [3] to test Bell-type inequalities. As pointed out by Gill et al. [4,5,6] and by Larsson and Gill [7], any effectively computable synchronization strategy (e.g., Ref. [8]) fails for spacelike separated observers who choose to switch the measurement directions at random [9,10]. For Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger (GHZ) measurements, the issue has already been discussed in the original paper by Pan et al. [11]. Yet, there might remain reservations and uneasiness related to the fact that in all the experiments performed so far, different terms in the Bell-type inequalities have been measured consecutively, one after another, in different experiment setups.
In what follows we shall investigate, as a second and arguable conceptually more gratifying alternative, the feasibility to either measure or counterfactually infer all required entities simultaneously. By "simultaneous" measurement we mean that all single measurements are pairwise spatially separated and temporally coincide in some reference frame (presumably in the centerof-mass frame of the particles involved). Note also that, due to the apparent randomness and parameter independence of the single outcomes in the correlation experiment, relativistic locality is possible.
Take, for example, the Clauser-Horne-Shimony-Holt (CHSH) inequality |E(â,b) , and E(â ′ ,b ′ ) associated with the four measurement directionsâ,â ′ ,b, andb ′ , respectively. Since in the usual Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen (EPR) type of setup only two particles occur, merely two of the four directions can be measured and counterfactually inferred in every experimental run. As depicted in Fig. 1a), four experimental runs with different parameter settingsâ-bâ-b ′ ,â ′ -b, andâ ′ -b ′ are necessary to collect the frequency counts necessary for the CHSH inequality.
In contrast to this consecutive measurements, Fig. 1b) depicts the hypothetical configuration associated with simultaneous measurements all the four parametersâ,â ′ ,b, andb ′ in a single experimental run; i.e., without the necessity to change the setup for measuring different joint probabilities.
Simultaneity presents a big conceptual challenge, both theoretically and experimentally. While entangled multi-partite (singlet) states abound, the EPR argument [12] requires the unambiguous existence of (counterfactual) elements of physical reality. Theoretically, this means that we have to find four-partite states with the uniqueness property [13] such that knowledge of a property of one particle entails the certainty that, if this property were measured on the other three particles as well, the outcome of the measurement would be a unique function of the outcome of the measurement actually performed. More than that, such a uniqueness property must hold for all the observables associated with the four measurement directionsâ,â ′ ,b, andb ′ , respectively. The uniqueness property differs from elements of physical reality in that the latter ones, in order to be definable by EPR type experimental setups, require the uniqueness property. However, absence of the uniqueness property does not necessarily imply that no elements of physical reality exists, as certain elements of physical reality might not be measurable via EPR type experimental setups. The existence of elements of physical reality is a necessary but not a sufficient condition for uniqueness of multi-partite quantum states.
For more than two quanta, no state satisfying the uniqueness property has ever been proposed. There exist two four-partite singlet states (and none for three particles), namely Both of these four-partite states are nonunique in all directions, for detection of, say, state "−" on the first particle leaves open the possibility to find the third and fourth particles either in states "+" or in "−" for |Ψ 2,4,s 1 . Likewise, the proposition For n > 1, they are nonunique.
Also for singlet states of three-state particles, the uniqueness limit is reached for two particles; i.e., for ("±" means here "±1") |Ψ 3,2,s = (1/ √ 3)(| + − + | − + − |00 ). The only singlet state of three spin one particles is which does not allow unambiguous counterfactual reasoning. The situation gets worse for singlet states of four or more spin one quanta, as all of the three singlet states |Ψ 3,4,s 1 , |Ψ 3,4,s 2 , |Ψ 3,4,s 3 of four spin one quanta are nonunique. From all singlet states of 2n spin-one particles, |Ψ 3,2n,s 3 contains the least number of terms. For n > 1, they are nonunique. In general, for an even number of 2n spin-j particles, the singlet states containing the least number of terms can be written as |Ψ j,2n,s = |Ψ j,2,s n , where |Ψ j,2,s is the two-partite singlet state.
Classically simultaneous measurements can be performed on an arbitrary number of particles and for arbitrary many observables. They are not bound by the quantum no-cloning theorem and complementarity.
Indeed, quantum probabilities do not allow the consistent co-existence of classical truth tables already for the usual Bell-type configurations such as CHSH [14,15]. We therefore conclude that it is impossible to construct quantum states of four or more particles with the uniqueness property for four or more directions. Likewise, because of nonuniqueness, the observables involved in a Kochen-Specker-type argument cannot be measured simultaneously.
Let us briely summarize as follows. The proposed scheme is not different from the standard treatment of EPR-type setups, since elements of physical reality are not directly measured but counterfactually inferred. One advantage of simultaneous measurements and inference might be the direct evaluation of all quantities involved; as compared to a serial, consecutive approach which is usually adopted. However, as the EPR argument is based on the uniqueness of the counterfactual properties, any such method fails already for more than two entangled particles.
A new kind of protection scheme seems to emerge which, due to the impossibility to find states with the required uniqueness property, forbids more direct experiments to measure all terms in Kochen-Specker-type, Bell-type or GHZ-type configurations at once. It is straightforward to deduce nonuniqueness for singlet states of three or more particles. An indirect argument, based on Bell-and Kochen-Specker-type theorems, proves the nonexistence of general states with the uniqueness property.