549 research outputs found
Entanglement and nonlocality are inequivalent for any number of particles
Understanding the relation between nonlocality and entanglement is one of the
fundamental problems in quantum physics. In the bipartite case, it is known
that the correlations observed for some entangled quantum states can be
explained within the framework of local models, thus proving that these
resources are inequivalent in this scenario. However, except for a single
example of an entangled three-qubit state that has a local model, almost
nothing is known about such relation in multipartite systems. We provide a
general construction of genuinely multipartite entangled states that do not
display genuinely multipartite nonlocality, thus proving that entanglement and
nonlocality are inequivalent for any number of particles.Comment: submitted version, 7 pages (4.25 + appendix), 1 figur
Two-setting Bell Inequalities for Graph States
We present Bell inequalities for graph states with high violation of local
realism. In particular, we show that there is a two-setting Bell inequality for
every nontrivial graph state which is violated by the state at least by a
factor of two. These inequalities are facets of the convex polytope containing
the many-body correlations consistent with local hidden variable models. We
first present a method which assigns a Bell inequality for each graph vertex.
Then for some families of graph states composite Bell inequalities can be
constructed with a violation of local realism increasing exponentially with the
number of qubits. We also suggest a systematic way for obtaining Bell
inequalities with a high violation of local realism for arbitrary graphs.Comment: 8 pages including 2 figures, revtex4; minor change
Device-independent tests of classical and quantum dimensions
We address the problem of testing the dimensionality of classical and quantum
systems in a `black-box' scenario. We develop a general formalism for tackling
this problem. This allows us to derive lower bounds on the classical dimension
necessary to reproduce given measurement data. Furthermore, we generalise the
concept of quantum dimension witnesses to arbitrary quantum systems, allowing
one to place a lower bound on the Hilbert space dimension necessary to
reproduce certain data. Illustrating these ideas, we provide simple examples of
classical and quantum dimension witnesses.Comment: To appear in PR
Hybrid noiseless subsystems for quantum communication over optical fibers
We derive the general structure of noiseless subsystems for optical radiation
contained in a sequence of pulses undergoing collective depolarization in an
optical fiber. This result is used to identify optimal ways to implement
quantum communication over a collectively depolarizing channel, which in
general combine various degrees of freedom, such as polarization and phase,
into joint hybrid schemes for protecting quantum coherence.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figur
Multipartite Bound Information exists and can be activated
We prove the conjectured existence of Bound Information, a classical analog
of bound entanglement, in the multipartite scenario. We give examples of
tripartite probability distributions from which it is impossible to extract any
kind of secret key, even in the asymptotic regime, although they cannot be
created by local operations and public communication. Moreover, we show that
bound information can be activated: three honest parties can distill a common
secret key from different distributions having bound information. Our results
demonstrate that quantum information theory can provide useful insight for
solving open problems in classical information theory.Comment: four page
Measures of entanglement in multipartite bound entangled states
Bound entangled states are states that are entangled but from which no
entanglement can be distilled if all parties are allowed only local operations
and classical communication. However, in creating these states one needs
nonzero entanglement resources to start with. Here, the entanglement of two
distinct multipartite bound entangled states is determined analytically in
terms of a geometric measure of entanglement and a related quantity. The
results are compared with those for the negativity and the relative entropy of
entanglement.Comment: 5 pages, no figure; title change
Translationally invariant multipartite Bell inequalities involving only two-body correlators
Bell inequalities are natural tools that allow one to certify the presence of
nonlocality in quantum systems. The known constructions of multipartite Bell
inequalities contain, however, correlation functions involving all observers,
making their experimental implementation difficult. The main purpose of this
work is to explore the possibility of witnessing nonlocality in multipartite
quantum states from the easiest-to-measure quantities, that is, the two-body
correlations. In particular, we determine all three and four-partite Bell
inequalities constructed from one and two-body expectation values that obey
translational symmetry, and show that they reveal nonlocality in multipartite
states. Also, by providing a particular example of a five-partite Bell
inequality, we show that nonlocality can be detected from two-body correlators
involving only nearest neighbours. Finally, we demonstrate that any
translationally invariant Bell inequality can be maximally violated by a
translationally invariant state and the same set of observables at all sites.
We provide a numerical algorithm allowing one to seek for maximal violation of
a translationally invariant Bell inequality.Comment: 21 pages, to be published in the special issue of JPA "50 years of
Bell's theorem
Detecting non-locality in multipartite quantum systems with two-body correlation functions
Bell inequalities define experimentally observable quantities to detect
non-locality. In general, they involve correlation functions of all the
parties. Unfortunately, these measurements are hard to implement for systems
consisting of many constituents, where only few-body correlation functions are
accessible. Here we demonstrate that higher-order correlation functions are not
necessary to certify nonlocality in multipartite quantum states by constructing
Bell inequalities from one- and two-body correlation functions for an arbitrary
number of parties. The obtained inequalities are violated by some of the Dicke
states, which arise naturally in many-body physics as the ground states of the
two-body Lipkin-Meshkov-Glick Hamiltonian.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures, 1 tabl
- …