Quantum mechanics forbids perfect discrimination among nonorthogonal states
through a single shot measurement. To optimize this task, many strategies were
devised that later became fundamental tools for quantum information processing.
Here, we address the pioneering minimum-error (ME) measurement and give the
first experimental demonstration of its application for discriminating
nonorthogonal states in high dimensions. Our scheme is designed to distinguish
symmetric pure states encoded in the transverse spatial modes of an optical
field; the optimal measurement is performed by a projection onto the Fourier
transform basis of these modes. For dimensions ranging from D = 2 to D = 21 and
nearly 14000 states tested, the deviations of the experimental results from the
theoretical values range from 0.3% to 3.6% (getting below 2% for the vast
majority), thus showing the excellent performance of our scheme. This ME
measurement is a building block for high-dimensional implementations of many
quantum communication protocols, including probabilistic state discrimination,
dense coding with nonmaximal entanglement, and cryptographic schemes.Comment: 13 pages, 13 figure