Observing High-dimensional Bell Inequality Violations using Multi-Outcome Spectral Measurements
Kiki Dekkers, Laura Serino, Nicola DAlessandro, Abhinandan Bhattacharjee, Benjamin Brecht, Armin Tavakoli, Christine Silberhorn, Jonathan Leach

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a method to observe high-dimensional Bell inequality violations using spectral measurements of entangled photons, overcoming previous measurement loopholes and simplifying experimental setups.
Contribution
It introduces a spectral measurement approach that certifies and violates high-dimensional Bell inequalities without binarisation loopholes, advancing quantum information protocols.
Findings
Violated CGLMP Bell inequality up to dimension d=8
Close the binarisation loophole in high-dimensional Bell tests
Simplified measurement process using frequency-only measurements
Abstract
Violation of Bell inequalities is an essential requirement for many quantum information and communication protocols. In high-dimensional systems, Bell inequality tests face the challenge of implementing genuinely multi-outcome measurements, since the emulation of these with separate dichotomic projections opens a binarisation loophole that local hidden variable theories can exploit. Here we show that the joint spectral intensity of a two-photon entangled state contains access to the necessary multi-outcome measurements to overcome this obstacle and certify and violate a Bell inequality for high-dimensional states. This result is contrary to the belief that the joint spectral intensity is a phase-insensitive quantity and does not have sufficient information to certify entanglement or Bell-nonlocality. Using this approach, we violate the CGLMP Bell inequality up to dimension d = 8, all…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Mechanics and Applications · Benford’s Law and Fraud Detection
