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Re: Testing methodology for the Chinese quantum satellite link?


From: Marshall Eubanks <marshall.eubanks () gmail com>
Date: Thu, 13 Jul 2017 20:04:52 -0400

On Thu, Jul 13, 2017 at 12:57 PM, Bill Woodcock <woody () pch net> wrote:

Does anyone who understands quantum networking better than I do have an
opinion on the testing methodology that the Chinese team used to confirm
entanglement?


Their paper

https://arxiv.org/abs/1707.01339

This is somewhat higher level

http://vcq.quantum.at/fileadmin/Publications/Entanglement-based%20quantum%20communication%20over%20144km.pdf

More math

https://arxiv.org/pdf/1410.1319.pdf



I guess, more specifically, my question is: when they say that they got
911 positive results out of “millions” of attempts, does this significantly
exceed any expected false-positive rate for the confirmation methodology?
If so, by what margin?  Obviously, if you were just flipping coins, and
measured the results once, you’d get 50% positive correlation, twice and
you’d get 25% correlation, ten times and you’d get 0.1% correlation, and
you’d be at 911 out of a million.  So, how much better than that are we
talking about?


Look at Figure 2b in the Ursin paper. You are always doing this against
some background, looking for a statistically significant peak.

Regards
Marshall



                                -Bill








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