Random Numbers Certified by Bell's Theorem
S. Pironio, A. Acin, S. Massar, A. Boyer de la Giroday, D. N., Matsukevich, P. Maunz, S. Olmschenk, D. Hayes, L. Luo, T. A. Manning, C., Monroe

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that entangled quantum particles can be used to generate certified genuine randomness without trusting device internals, verified through Bell inequality violations, with a proof-of-concept experiment producing 42 random numbers.
Contribution
It introduces a method for device-independent quantum random number generation based on Bell inequality violations, validated by an experimental demonstration.
Findings
Bell inequality violation certifies genuine randomness
42 random numbers generated with 99% confidence
Near-perfect detection efficiency achieved in experiment
Abstract
Randomness is a fundamental feature in nature and a valuable resource for applications ranging from cryptography and gambling to numerical simulation of physical and biological systems. Random numbers, however, are difficult to characterize mathematically, and their generation must rely on an unpredictable physical process. Inaccuracies in the theoretical modelling of such processes or failures of the devices, possibly due to adversarial attacks, limit the reliability of random number generators in ways that are difficult to control and detect. Here, inspired by earlier work on nonlocality based and device independent quantum information processing, we show that the nonlocal correlations of entangled quantum particles can be used to certify the presence of genuine randomness. It is thereby possible to design of a new type of cryptographically secure random number generator which does…
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