Practical and Efficient Verification of Entanglement with Incomplete Measurement Settings
Jiheon Seong, Jin-Woo Kim, Seungchan Seo, Seung-Hyun Nam, Anindita Bera, Dariusz Chruściński, June-Koo Kevin Rhee, Heonoh Kim, Joonwoo Bae
Abstract
In this work, we present a practical and efficient framework for verifying entangled states when only a tomographically incomplete measurement setting is available-specifically, when access to observables is severely limited. We show how the experimental estimation of a small number of observables can be directly exploited to construct a large family of entanglement witnesses, enabling the efficient identification of entangled states. Moreover, we introduce an optimization approach, formulated as a semidefinite program, that systematically searches for those witnesses best suited to reveal entanglement under the given measurement constraints. We demonstrate the practicality of the approach in a proof-of-principle experiment with photon-polarization qubits, where entanglement is certified using only a fraction of the full measurement data. These results reveal the maximal usefulness of incomplete measurement settings for entanglement verification in realistic scenarios.
