Efficient device-independent entanglement detection for multipartite systems

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Abstract

Entanglement is one of the most studied properties of quantum mechanics for its application in quantum information protocols. Nevertheless, detecting the presence of entanglement in large multipartite states continues to be a great challenge both from the theoretical and the experimental point of view. Most of the known methods either have computational costs that scale inefficiently with the number of particles or require more information on the state than what is attainable in everyday experiments. We introduce a new technique for entanglement detection that provides several important advantages in these respects. First, it scales efficiently with the number of particles, thus allowing for application to systems composed by up to few tens of particles. Second, it needs only the knowledge of a subset of all possible measurements on the state, therefore being apt for experimental implementation. Moreover, since it is based on the detection of nonlocality, our method is device independent. We report several examples of its implementation for wellknown multipartite states, showing that the introduced technique has a promising range of applications.

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Baccari, F., Cavalcanti, D., Wittek, P., & Acín, A. (2017, June 14). Efficient device-independent entanglement detection for multipartite systems. Physical Review X. American Physical Society. https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.7.021042

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