| Literature DB >> 26235944 |
D Cavalcanti1, P Skrzypczyk1,2, G H Aguilar3, R V Nery3, P H Souto Ribeiro3, S P Walborn3.
Abstract
The future of quantum communication relies on quantum networks composed by observers sharing multipartite quantum states. The certification of multipartite entanglement will be crucial to the usefulness of these networks. In many real situations it is natural to assume that some observers are more trusted than others in the sense that they have more knowledge of their measurement apparatuses. Here we propose a general method to certify all kinds of multipartite entanglement in this asymmetric scenario and experimentally demonstrate it in an optical experiment. Our results, which can be seen as a definition of genuine multipartite quantum steering, give a method to detect entanglement in a scenario in between the standard entanglement and fully device-independent scenarios, and provide a basis for semi-device-independent cryptographic applications in quantum networks.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26235944 PMCID: PMC4532875 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms8941
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Figure 1Asymmetric tripartite networks where untrusted devices are treated as black boxes with classical inputs and outputs.
(a) One untrusted party scenario: Alice, who holds an untrusted device, treats it as a black box in which she inputs x (the measurement choice) and receives an output a (the measurement outcome). This procedure corresponds mathematically to applying some unknown measurement operator to the shared tripartite quantum state, which produces a post-measurement state at Bob and Charlie's locations. (b) A similar situation occurs in the two untrusted party scenario, when both Alice and Bob perform untrusted measurements (corresponding to unknown measurement operators and , respectively) preparing quantum states on Charlie's system.
Critical robustness to white noise w.
| GHZ | 3/7≈0.429 | ≈0.54 | ≈0.63 | 2/3≈0.67 |
| W | ≈0.479 | ≈0.57 | ≈0.67 | ≈0.72 |
We provide a comparison between the known bounds on critical robustness to white noise of the GHZ and W states above which genuine multipartite entanglement can be detected in four different scenarios: when no party is untrusted (that is, the standard entanglement scenario3839), when 1 and 2 parties hold untrusted devices, for which we used the semi-device-independent method developed here, and when all devices are untrusted, that is, the device-independent case developed in ref. 23. In the Supplementary Table 2, we also display the bounds concerning the detection of (not necessarily genuine multipartite) entanglement in these states.
Figure 2Experimental setup and results.
(a) A 325 nm laser pumps two 1-mm long cross axis BBO crystals. Probabilistically, two photons are produced in the state (14) via parametric down conversion42. The polarization entangled state is a superposition of vertically polarized signal and idler beams produced in the first crystal and the horizontally polarized ones produced in the second crystal. Signal photons in B are sent to beam displacer BD1, which transmit vertical polarization and deviate horizontal polarization. This results in the production of a GHZ state after BD1, with two qubits encoded in the polarization of photons A and B, and one qubit encoded in the path of photon B. Photons in mode A are detected after polarization projection, which is done using the quarter-wave plate (QWP) QA, half-wave plate (HWP) HA and polarizing beam splitter PBSA. We perform a joint analysis of the polarization and path bases of photon B using the sequence of devices QWP QB, HWP HB beam displacer BD2, QWP QB, HWP HB and polarizing beam splitter PBSB. For given adjustments of the QWPs and HWPs, we perform one specific joint projection in the polarization and path basis. Since there is a coherent combination of spatial modes 0 and 1 in BD2, the measurement of the path of photon B is done by mapping the spatial qubit before BD2 into the polarization at the output of BD2. Even though the projection is made simultaneously for both qubits in this case, they are independent, or in other words, all combinations of projections are possible4041. (b) Histograms obtained by computing the semi-device-independent entanglement witness from the experimental data (see main text and the Supplementary Note 5 for more details about the witness). We measured the value of each witness 215 independent times. The upper histogram is for the case of one untrusted party, resulting in the average value of −0.82 and s.d. of 0.05. The lower histogram is for the case of two untrusted parties, resulting in the average of −0.56 and s.d. of 0.04.