For the purpose of the nonlocality test, we propose a general correlation
observable of two parties by utilizing local d-outcome measurements with
SU(d) transformations and classical communications. Generic symmetries of the
SU(d) transformations and correlation observables are found for the test of
nonlocality. It is shown that these symmetries dramatically reduce the number
of numerical variables, which is important for numerical analysis of
nonlocality. A linear combination of the correlation observables, which is
reduced to the Clauser-Horne-Shimony-Holt (CHSH) Bell's inequality for two
outcome measurements, is led to the Collins-Gisin-Linden-Massar-Popescu (CGLMP)
nonlocality test for d-outcome measurement. As a system to be tested for its
nonlocality, we investigate a continuous-variable (CV) entangled state with d
measurement outcomes. It allows the comparison of nonlocality based on
different numbers of measurement outcomes on one physical system. In our
example of the CV state, we find that a pure entangled state of any degree
violates Bell's inequality for d(≥2) measurement outcomes when the
observables are of SU(d) transformations.Comment: 16 pages, 2 figure