
Experimental violation of Mermin steering inequality by three-photon entangled states with nontrivial GHZ-fidelity
Author(s) -
Jian Li,
Tong Jun Liu,
Si Wang,
C. Jebarathinam,
Qin Wang
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
optics express
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.394
H-Index - 271
ISSN - 1094-4087
DOI - 10.1364/oe.27.013559
Subject(s) - quantum nonlocality , quantum entanglement , fidelity , physics , photon , context (archaeology) , bell's theorem , quantum mechanics , upper and lower bounds , quantum , theoretical physics , computer science , mathematics , mathematical analysis , telecommunications , paleontology , biology
Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen steering is an intermediate relationship between entanglement and Bell nonlocality in the hierarchical structure of quantum nonlocality. To certify the steerability of the entangled state, Mermin steering inequality is supposed to be violated by exceeding the inequality bound of 2. We present an experimental generation of post-selected three-photon entangled states and witness a maximal violation of the inequality up to 3.50±0.05. In the context of observing the maximal violation of Mermin steering inequality which requires measuring on the GHZ state, we derive a tight lower bound on the GHZ-fidelity that can be certified from the Mermin steering inequality violation. From this bound, it follows that the violation of Mermin steering inequality by 3.5 certifies the GHZ-fidelity of 78.66% at least. On the other hand, the above maximal violation of Mermin steering inequality observed in our experimental setup is produced by a post-selected entangled state having the GHZ-fidelity of 87.25 ± 0.34% through quantum tomography.