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Experimental test of sequential weak measurements for certified quantum randomness extraction

Giulio Foletto, Matteo Padovan, Marco Avesani, Hamid Tebyanian, Paolo Villoresi, Giuseppe Vallone

2021Physical review. A/Physical review, A43 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Quantum nonlocality offers a secure way to produce random numbers: Their unpredictability is intrinsic and can be certified just by observing the statistic of the measurement outcomes, without assumptions on how they are produced. To do this, entangled pairs are generated and measured to violate a Bell inequality with the outcome statistics. However, after a projective quantum measurement, entanglement is entirely destroyed and cannot be used again. This fact poses an upper bound to the amount of randomness that can be produced from each quantum state when projective measurements are employed. Instead, by using weak measurements, some entanglement can be maintained and reutilized, and a sequence of weak measurements can extract an unbounded amount of randomness from a single state as predicted in [Phys. Rev. A 95, 020102(R) (2017)]. We study the feasibility of these weak measurements, analyze the robustness to imperfections in the quantum state they are applied to, and then test them using an optical setup based on polarization-entangled photon pairs. We show that the weak measurements are realizable, but can improve the performance of randomness generation only in close-to-ideal conditions.

Topics & Concepts

RandomnessQuantum entanglementQuantum nonlocalityWeak measurementQuantum mechanicsPhysicsQuantumBell's theoremStatistical physicsRobustness (evolution)Randomness testsQuantum stateMathematicsStatisticsChemistryGeneBiochemistryQuantum Mechanics and ApplicationsQuantum Information and CryptographyBiofield Effects and Biophysics