Using weak values to experimentally determine "negative probabilities" in a two-photon state with Bell correlations
B. L. Higgins, M. S. Palsson, G. Y. Xiang, H. M. Wiseman, and G. J., Pryde

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates how weak measurements can empirically determine 'negative probabilities' in a Bell-correlated two-photon quantum state, revealing quantum correlations beyond classical probability constraints.
Contribution
It introduces an experimental method to measure weak-valued probabilities, including negative values, in Bell tests, providing empirical evidence of non-classical probability distributions.
Findings
Reproduces quantum statistics including Bell inequality violations
Empirically measures weak-valued probabilities with negative values
Identifies a unique set of probabilities consistent with quantum correlations
Abstract
Bipartite quantum entangled systems can exhibit measurement correlations that violate Bell inequalities, revealing the profoundly counter-intuitive nature of the physical universe. These correlations reflect the impossibility of constructing a joint probability distribution for all values of all the different properties observed in Bell inequality tests. Physically, the impossibility of measuring such a distribution experimentally, as a set of relative frequencies, is due to the quantum back-action of projective measurements. Weakly coupling to a quantum probe, however, produces minimal back-action, and so enables a weak measurement of the projector of one observable, followed by a projective measurement of a non-commuting observable. By this technique it is possible to empirically measure weak-valued probabilities for all of the values of the observables relevant to a Bell test. The…
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