English

Tailored two-photon correlation and fair-sampling: a cautionary tale

Quantum Physics 2015-06-17 v1

Abstract

We demonstrate an experimental test of the Clauser-Horne-Shimony-Holt (CHSH) Bell inequality which seemingly exhibits correlations beyond the limits imposed by quantum mechanics. Inspired by the idea of Fourier synthesis, we design analysers that measure specific superpositions of orbital angular momentum (OAM) states, such that when one analyser is rotated with respect to the other, the resulting coincidence curves are similar to a square-wave. Calculating the CHSH Bell parameter, SS, from these curves result to values beyond the Tsirelson bound of SQM=22S_{QM}=2\sqrt{2}. We obtain S=3.99±0.02S=3.99\pm0.02, implying almost perfect nonlocal Popescu-Rohrlich correlations. The "super-quantum" values of SS is only possible in our experiment because our experiment, subtly, does not comply with fair-sampling. The way our Bell test fails fair-sampling is not immediately obvious and requires knowledge of the states being measured. Our experiment highlights the caution needed in Bell-type experiments based on measurements within high-dimensional state spaces such as that of OAM, especially in the advent of device-independent quantum protocols.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1308.4819,
  title  = {Tailored two-photon correlation and fair-sampling: a cautionary tale},
  author = {Jacquiline Romero and Daniel Giovannini and Daniel Tasca and Steve Barnett and Miles Padgett},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1308.4819},
  year   = {2015}
}

Comments

to be published in New J Phys

R2 v1 2026-06-22T01:13:18.596Z