Self-Testing of a Single Quantum System: Theory and Experiment

Certifying individual quantum devices with minimal assumptions is crucial for the development of quantum technologies. Here, we investigate how to leverage single-system contextuality to realize self-testing. We develop a robust self-testing protocol based on the simplest contextuality witness for t...

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Hauptverfasser: Hu, Xiao-Min, Xie, Yi, Arora, Atul Singh, Ai, Ming-Zhong, Bharti, Kishor, Zhang, Jie, Wu, Wei, Chen, Ping-Xing, Cui, Jin-Ming, Liu, Bi-Heng, Huang, Yun-Feng, Li, Chuan-Feng, Guo, Guang-Can, Roland, Jérémie, Cabello, Adán, Kwek, Leong-Chuan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Certifying individual quantum devices with minimal assumptions is crucial for the development of quantum technologies. Here, we investigate how to leverage single-system contextuality to realize self-testing. We develop a robust self-testing protocol based on the simplest contextuality witness for the simplest contextual quantum system, the Klyachko-Can-Binicio\u{g}lu-Shumovsky (KCBS) inequality for the qutrit. We establish a lower bound on the fidelity of the state and the measurements (to an ideal configuration) as a function of the value of the witness under a pragmatic assumption on the measurements we call the KCBS orthogonality condition. We apply the method in an experiment with randomly chosen measurements on a single trapped $^{40}{\rm Ca}^+$ and near-perfect detection efficiency. The observed statistics allow us to self-test the system and provide the first experimental demonstration of quantum self-testing of a single system. Further, we quantify and report that deviations from our assumptions are minimal, an aspect previously overlooked by contextuality experiments.
DOI:10.48550/arxiv.2203.09003