Litcius/Paper detail

Oblivious communication game, self-testing of projective and nonprojective measurements, and certification of randomness

A. K. Pan

2021Physical review. A/Physical review, A25 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

We provide an interesting two-party parity-oblivious communication game whose success probability is solely determined by the Bell expression. The parity-oblivious condition in an operational quantum theory implies the preparation noncontextuality in an ontological model of it. We find that the aforementioned Bell expression has two upper bounds in an ontological model: the usual local bound and a nontrivial preparation noncontextual bound arising from the nontrivial parity-oblivious condition, which is smaller that the local bound. We first demonstrate the communication game when both Alice and Bob perform three measurements of dichotomic observables in their respective sites. The optimal quantum value of the Bell expression in this scenario enables us to device-independently self-test the maximally entangled state and trine set of observables, three-outcome qubit positive-operator-valued measures and 1.58 bits of local randomness. Further, we generalize the above communication game in that both Alice and Bob perform the same but arbitrary (odd) number ($n>3$) of measurements. Based on the optimal quantum value of the relevant Bell expression for any arbitrary $n$, we also demonstrate device-independent self-testing of the state and measurements.

Topics & Concepts

RandomnessObservableParity (physics)Upper and lower boundsAlice and BobQubitMathematicsDiscrete mathematicsQuantumState (computer science)Computer sciencePhysicsQuantum mechanicsAlgorithmStatisticsMathematical analysisQuantum Mechanics and ApplicationsQuantum Information and CryptographyQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture