1,585 research outputs found
On quantum non-signalling boxes
A classical non-signalling (or causal) box is an operation on classical
bipartite input with classical bipartite output such that no signal can be sent
from a party to the other through the use of the box. The quantum counterpart
of such boxes, i.e. completely positive trace-preserving maps on bipartite
states, though studied in literature, have been investigated less intensively
than classical boxes. We present here some results and remarks about such maps.
In particular, we analyze: the relations among properties as causality,
non-locality and entanglement; the connection between causal and entanglement
breaking maps; the characterization of causal maps in terms of the
classification of states with fixed reductions. We also provide new proofs of
the fact that every non-product unitary transformation is not causal, as well
as for the equivalence of the so-called semicausality and semilocalizability
properties.Comment: 18 pages, 7 figures, revtex
A Schmidt number for density matrices
We introduce the notion of a Schmidt number of a bipartite density matrix,
characterizing the minimum Schmidt rank of the pure states that are needed to
construct the density matrix. We prove that Schmidt number is nonincreasing
under local quantum operations and classical communication. We show that
-positive maps witness Schmidt number, in the same way that positive maps
witness entanglement. We show that the family of states which is made from
mixing the completely mixed state and a maximally entangled state have
increasing Schmidt number depending on the amount of maximally entangled state
that is mixed in. We show that Schmidt number {\it does not necessarily
increase} when taking tensor copies of a density matrix ; we give an
example of a density matrix for which the Schmidt numbers of and are both 2.Comment: 5 pages RevTex, 1 typo in Proof Lemma 1 correcte
Measuring Multipartite Concurrence with a Single Factorizable Observable
We show that, for any composite system with an arbitrary number of
finite-dimensional subsystems, it is possible to directly measure the
multipartite concurrence of pure states by detecting only one single
factorizable observable, provided that two copies of the composite state are
available. This result can be immediately put into practice in trapped-ion and
entangled-photon experiments.Comment: 4 pages; no figures; published versio
Unconditional privacy over channels which cannot convey quantum information
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
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