Device-independent Certification of One-shot Distillable Entanglement
Rotem Arnon, Jean-Daniel Bancal

TL;DR
This paper introduces a protocol for device-independent certification of one-shot distillable entanglement from noisy, realistic quantum sources, enabling operational benchmarking without assuming device trustworthiness.
Contribution
It presents the first operational device-independent protocol to certify and quantify one-shot distillable entanglement from uncharacterized, noisy quantum sources.
Findings
Protocol tolerates noise and realistic imperfections
Certifies high one-shot distillable entanglement
Enables benchmarking of uncharacterized sources
Abstract
Entanglement sources that produce many entangled states act as a main component in applications exploiting quantum physics such as quantum communication and cryptography. Realistic sources are inherently noisy, cannot run for an infinitely long time, and do not necessarily behave in an independent and identically distributed manner. An important question then arises -- how can one test, or certify, that a realistic source produces high amounts of entanglement? Crucially, a meaningful and operational solution should allow us to certify the entanglement which is available for further applications after performing the test itself (in contrast to assuming the availability of an additional source which can produce more entangled states, identical to those which were tested). To answer the above question and lower bound the amount of entanglement produced by an uncharacterised source, we…
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