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A robust Bell inequality without two-outcome measurements William Plick, PhD IQOQI Vienna APS March Meeting, March 6th, 2014

A robust Bell inequality without two-outcome measurements

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A robust Bell inequality without two-outcome measurements. William Plick , PhD IQOQI Vienna. APS March Meeting, March 6 th, 2014 . Why another inequality?. Already so many! This work started as an attempt to violate a local-realistic inequality in a very difficult experimental system. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: A robust Bell inequality without two-outcome measurements

A robust Bell inequality without two-outcome measurements

William Plick, PhDIQOQI Vienna

APS March Meeting, March 6th, 2014

Page 2: A robust Bell inequality without two-outcome measurements

Why another inequality?Already so many!

This work started as an attempt to violate a local-realistic inequality in a very difficult experimental system.

The experiment in question had no access to dichotomic (two-outcome) measurements, and detections were extremely lossy.

No previously derived inequality was suitable.

Page 3: A robust Bell inequality without two-outcome measurements

The Wigner Inequality

Three settings

Two Parties

(+ + -, - - +)Perfect Anti-Correlations:

(+ + -, - - +) + (+ - -, - + +) (+ - -, - + +) + (+ - +, - + -) (+ + -, - - +) + (- + -, - + -)

(+ + -, - - +) + (+ - -, - + +) + (+ + -, - - +) + (- + -, - + -)

+ 34 ≤

14 +14

Page 4: A robust Bell inequality without two-outcome measurements

How Come I Haven’t Heard of It?Needs only single-outcome measurements.

Does not require use of the singles.

But, requires perfect anti-correlation in the proof itself.

What about symbols like (+ + +, - - +) ?

Page 5: A robust Bell inequality without two-outcome measurements

Extending the InequalityHow to make the inequality describe a real experiment?

(+ - -, - - +) + (+ - -, - + +) + . . . + (+ + +, + + +)

Some new terms cancel. Some can be bound from above:

(+ + +, + + +)

One new term in particular is a huge jerk:(+ - -, - - +)

Page 6: A robust Bell inequality without two-outcome measurements

“Half-Way” Result The “Jerk Term” prevents any useful inequality from being derived

without some assumptions.

However if we understand the physical system we can make very reasonable assumptions.

Original goal of derivation was to violate local-realism in a novel experimental system: entangled states of light with very high orbital angular momentum.

The way the system behaved was well understood so we could make some very reasonable assumptions and violate local realism in this system.

“An extension of the Wigner inequality: theory and experiment” arXiv:1304.2197 (2013) In review: PRA

Page 7: A robust Bell inequality without two-outcome measurements

Adding Counterfactuality

+ +(+ - -, - - +) (+ - -, - + +) . . . (+ + +, + + +)

=“Click Pattern” Measurement

AnglesBob’s Side Hidden

Polarization

Page 8: A robust Bell inequality without two-outcome measurements

A Counterfactual Asymmetric Inequality

Jerk Term Friendly Terms

Page 9: A robust Bell inequality without two-outcome measurements

Comparison to Other Inequalities

Page 10: A robust Bell inequality without two-outcome measurements

Review and Next Steps We have combined ideas from the Wigner inequality, counterfactual “Kochen-

Specker”-type arguments, and the (non-local) Leggett inequality into something wholly new.

Our inequality is asymmetric in its measurement requirements. One side must utilize photonic polarization modes. The other can be anything with some form of anti-correlation.

The inequality requires neither single-count rates, nor two-outcome measurements. No other inequality (to our knowledge) possesses both these characteristics.

What’s not yet known: efficiency requirements, the role of locality, and how far this formalism can be pushed.

Some other next steps: generalize to non-planar polarizations, extend the “Leggett Side” to another quantum-mechanical degree of freedom, etc.

Page 11: A robust Bell inequality without two-outcome measurements

Acknowledgements

Anton Zeilinger

Sven Ramelow Robert

Fickler

ADVANCEDGRANT: QIT4QADERC

Johannes Kofler

Radek

Lapkiewicz

Page 12: A robust Bell inequality without two-outcome measurements

Thank you!