Abstract

Macrorealism is a classical world view asserting that the properties of macro-objects exist independently and irrespective of observation. One practical approach to test this view in quantum theory is to observe the quantum coherence for a macro-object in an interference experiment. An elegant and conceptually appealing approach for testing the notion of macrorealism in quantum theory is through the violation of Leggett-Garg inequality. However, a conclusive Leggett-Garg test hinges on how the noninvasive measurability criteria are guaranteed in an experiment and remains a debated issue to date. In this work, we connect the practical and the conceptual approaches for testing the macrorealism through the weak value. We argue that whenever a quantum effect is observed in an interference experiment there is an existence of anomalous weak value. Further, we demonstrate that whenever such weak value exists, one obtains the violation of a Leggett-Garg inequality in any interference experiment. Since in a path-only interference experiment effectively no prior measurement is performed, the Leggett-Garg test of macrorealism presented here is without assuming the noninvasive measurability. We provide a rigorous discussion about the assumptions involved in the Leggett-Garg scenario and how our scheme fits into it. Further, we provide a simple argument about the macrorealistic understanding of our results by using the recently developed approach involving quasiprobability.

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