Device-Independent Randomness Amplification
Anatoly Kulikov, Simon Storz, Josua D. Sch\"ar, Martin Sandfuchs,, Ramona Wolf, Florence Berterotti\`ere, Christoph Hellings, Renato Renner,, Andreas Wallraff

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates the amplification of imperfect randomness using a loophole-free Bell test with superconducting circuits, advancing the practical realization of device-independent randomness amplification for cryptography.
Contribution
It presents an experimental implementation of a theoretical protocol for randomness amplification using superconducting circuits, bridging the gap between theory and practical application.
Findings
Successful loophole-free Bell test with superconducting circuits.
Amplification of weak randomness sources demonstrated.
Progress towards physical limits of privacy and randomness generation.
Abstract
Successful realization of Bell tests has settled an 80-year-long debate, proving the existence of correlations which cannot be explained by a local realistic model. Recent experimental progress allowed to rule out any possible loopholes in these tests, and opened up the possibility of applications in cryptography envisaged more than three decades ago. A prominent example of such an application is device-independent quantum key distribution, which has recently been demonstrated. One remaining gap in all existing experiments, however, is that access to perfect randomness is assumed. To tackle this problem, the concept of randomness amplification has been introduced, allowing to generate such randomness from a weak source -- a task impossible in classical physics. In this work, we demonstrate the amplification of imperfect randomness coming from a physical source. It is achieved by…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeural Networks and Applications · Blind Source Separation Techniques · CCD and CMOS Imaging Sensors
