33 research outputs found

    Unconditional privacy over channels which cannot convey quantum information

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    By sending systems in specially prepared quantum states, two parties can communicate without an eavesdropper being able to listen. The technique, called quantum cryptography, enables one to verify that the state of the quantum system has not been tampered with, and thus one can obtain privacy regardless of the power of the eavesdropper. All previous protocols relied on the ability to faithfully send quantum states. In fact, until recently, they could all be reduced to a single protocol where security is ensured though sharing maximally entangled states. Here we show this need not be the case -- one can obtain verifiable privacy even through some channels which cannot be used to reliably send quantum states.Comment: Related to quant-ph/0608195 and for a more general audienc

    Local information as a resource in distributed quantum systems

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    We develop a paradigm for distributed quantum systems, where not only quantum communication, but also information is a valuable resource. We construct a scheme for manipulating information in analogy to entanglement theory. In this scheme, instead of maximally entangled states, Alice and Bob distill product states. We then show that the main tools of entanglement theory are general enough to work also in this opposite scheme. We obtain, up to a plausible assumption, that the amount of information that must be lost during a concentration protocol can be expressed as the relative entropy distance from some set of states

    On asymptotic continuity of functions of quantum states

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    A useful kind of continuity of quantum states functions in asymptotic regime is so-called asymptotic continuity. In this paper we provide general tools for checking if a function possesses this property. First we prove equivalence of asymptotic continuity with so-called it robustness under admixture. This allows us to show that relative entropy distance from a convex set including maximally mixed state is asymptotically continuous. Subsequently, we consider it arrowing - a way of building a new function out of a given one. The procedure originates from constructions of intrinsic information and entanglement of formation. We show that arrowing preserves asymptotic continuity for a class of functions (so-called subextensive ones). The result is illustrated by means of several examples.Comment: Minor corrections, version submitted for publicatio

    Entanglement distribution and quantum discord

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    Establishing entanglement between distant parties is one of the most important problems of quantum technology, since long-distance entanglement is an essential part of such fundamental tasks as quantum cryptography or quantum teleportation. In this lecture we review basic properties of entanglement and quantum discord, and discuss recent results on entanglement distribution and the role of quantum discord therein. We also review entanglement distribution with separable states, and discuss important problems which still remain open. One such open problem is a possible advantage of indirect entanglement distribution, when compared to direct distribution protocols.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures, contribution to "Lectures on general quantum correlations and their applications", edited by Felipe Fanchini, Diogo Soares-Pinto, and Gerardo Adess

    The thermodynamic meaning of negative entropy

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    Landauer's erasure principle exposes an intrinsic relation between thermodynamics and information theory: the erasure of information stored in a system, S, requires an amount of work proportional to the entropy of that system. This entropy, H(S|O), depends on the information that a given observer, O, has about S, and the work necessary to erase a system may therefore vary for different observers. Here, we consider a general setting where the information held by the observer may be quantum-mechanical, and show that an amount of work proportional to H(S|O) is still sufficient to erase S. Since the entropy H(S|O) can now become negative, erasing a system can result in a net gain of work (and a corresponding cooling of the environment).Comment: Added clarification on non-cyclic erasure and reversible computation (Appendix E). For a new version of all technical proofs see the Supplementary Information of the journal version (free access

    Monogamy of entanglement and other correlations

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    It has been observed by numerous authors that a quantum system being entangled with another one limits its possible entanglement with a third system: this has been dubbed the "monogamous nature of entanglement". In this paper we present a simple identity which captures the trade-off between entanglement and classical correlation, which can be used to derive rigorous monogamy relations. We also prove various other trade-offs of a monogamy nature for other entanglement measures and secret and total correlation measures.Comment: 7 pages, revtex
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