| Literature DB >> 24598858 |
Chunfeng Wu1, Jing-Ling Chen2, Xiang-Jun Ye2, Hong-Yi Su2, Dong-Ling Deng3, Zhenghan Wang4, C H Oh5.
Abstract
In comparison with entanglement and Bell nonlocality, Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen steering is a newly emerged research topic and in its incipient stage. Although Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen steering has been explored via violations of steering inequalities both theoretically and experimentally, the known inequalities in the literatures are far from well-developed. As a result, it is not yet possible to observe Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen steering for some steerable mixed states. Recently, a simple approach was presented to identify Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen steering based on all-versus-nothing argument, offering a strong condition to witness the steerability of a family of two-qubit (pure or mixed) entangled states. In this work, we show that the all-versus-nothing proof of Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen steering can be tested by measuring the projective probabilities. Through the bound of probabilities imposed by local-hidden-state model, the proposed test shows that steering can be detected by the all-versus-nothing argument experimentally even in the presence of imprecision and errors. Our test can be implemented in many physical systems and we discuss the possible realizations of our scheme with non-Abelian anyons and trapped ions.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24598858 PMCID: PMC3944728 DOI: 10.1038/srep04291
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Numerical results of the bound Δ imposed by the optimal LHS model versus θ.
For (a) |Ψ〉 and (b) ρ.
Figure 3Variations of Δ for |Ψ〉 versus n/θ.
(a) θ = π/8 and n ranges from 20 to 120, (b) θ = π/6 and n ranges from 20 to 120, as well as (c) n = 46, 50, 100 and θ ranges from 0 to π/2. From (a) and (b), we find that the variation of Δ is negligibly small when n > 45 since the variation is in the ten-thousandths place. From (c) it is clear that the three curves are almost overlapped and the results show that n = 46 is large enough to obtain a reasonable value of Δ.
Figure 2Approximating quantum gates U by braiding Fibonacci anyons.
In the plotting, time flows from left to right, U1 represents U/6 and U2 represents U−.