91 research outputs found
Quantum entanglement
All our former experience with application of quantum theory seems to say:
{\it what is predicted by quantum formalism must occur in laboratory}. But the
essence of quantum formalism - entanglement, recognized by Einstein, Podolsky,
Rosen and Schr\"odinger - waited over 70 years to enter to laboratories as a
new resource as real as energy.
This holistic property of compound quantum systems, which involves
nonclassical correlations between subsystems, is a potential for many quantum
processes, including ``canonical'' ones: quantum cryptography, quantum
teleportation and dense coding. However, it appeared that this new resource is
very complex and difficult to detect. Being usually fragile to environment, it
is robust against conceptual and mathematical tools, the task of which is to
decipher its rich structure.
This article reviews basic aspects of entanglement including its
characterization, detection, distillation and quantifying. In particular, the
authors discuss various manifestations of entanglement via Bell inequalities,
entropic inequalities, entanglement witnesses, quantum cryptography and point
out some interrelations. They also discuss a basic role of entanglement in
quantum communication within distant labs paradigm and stress some
peculiarities such as irreversibility of entanglement manipulations including
its extremal form - bound entanglement phenomenon. A basic role of entanglement
witnesses in detection of entanglement is emphasized.Comment: 110 pages, 3 figures, ReVTex4, Improved (slightly extended)
presentation, updated references, minor changes, submitted to Rev. Mod. Phys
Secure key from bound entanglement
We characterize the set of shared quantum states which contain a
cryptographically private key. This allows us to recast the theory of privacy
as a paradigm closely related to that used in entanglement manipulation. It is
shown that one can distill an arbitrarily secure key from bound entangled
states. There are also states which have less distillable private key than the
entanglement cost of the state. In general the amount of distillable key is
bounded from above by the relative entropy of entanglement. Relationships
between distillability and distinguishability are found for a class of states
which have Bell states correlated to separable hiding states. We also describe
a technique for finding states exhibiting irreversibility in entanglement
distillation.Comment: 4 pages, no figures, to appear in PR
General paradigm for distilling classical key from quantum states
We develop a formalism for distilling a classical key from a quantum state in
a systematic way, expanding on our previous work on secure key from bound
entanglement [K. Horodecki et. al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 94 (2005)]. More detailed
proofs, discussion and examples are provided of the main results. Namely, we
demonstrate that all quantum cryptographic protocols can be recast in a way
which looks like entanglement theory, with the only change being that instead
of distilling EPR pairs, the parties distill private states. The form of these
general private states are given, and we show that there are a number of useful
ways of expressing them. Some of the private states can be approximated by
certain states which are bound entangled. Thus distillable entanglement is not
a requirement for a private key. We find that such bound entangled states are
useful for a cryptographic primitive we call a controlled private quantum
channel. We also find a general class of states which have negative partial
transpose (are NPT), but which appear to be bound entangled. The relative
entropy distance is shown to be an upper bound on the rate of key. This allows
us to compute the exact value of distillable key for a certain class of private
states.Comment: 41 pages, ReVTeX4, improved version, resubmitted to IEE
Low dimensional bound entanglement with one-way distillable cryptographic key
We provide a class of bound entangled states that have positive distillable
secure key rate. The smallest state of this kind is , which shows
that peculiar security contained in bound entangled states does not need high
dimensional systems. We show, that for these states a positive key rate can be
obtained by {\it one-way} Devetak-Winter protocol. Subsequently the volume of
bound entangled key-distillable states in arbitrary dimension is shown to be
nonzero. We provide a scheme of verification of cryptographic quality of
experimentally prepared state in terms of local observables. Proposed set of 7
collective settings is proven to be optimal in number of settings.Comment: 5 pages, ReVTex
Quantum key distribution based on private states: unconditional security over untrusted channels with zero quantum capacity
We prove unconditional security for a quantum key distribution (QKD) protocol
based on distilling pbits (twisted ebits) [quant-ph/0309110] from an arbitrary
untrusted state that is claimed to contain distillable key. Our main result is
that we can verify security using only public communication -- via parameter
estimation of the given untrusted state. The technique applies even to bound
entangled states, thus extending QKD to the regime where the available quantum
channel has zero quantum capacity. We also show how to convert our
purification-based QKD schemes to prepare-measure schemes.Comment: Final version for IEEE TI
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