82 research outputs found
Distillability of Inseparable Quantum Systems
We apply the inseparability criterion for systems, local
filtering and Bennett et al. purification protocol [Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf 76},
722 (1996)] to show how to distill {\it any} inseparable system.
The extended protocol is illustrated geometrically by means of the state
parameters in the Hilbert-Schmidt space.Comment: Revtex, 4 pages (in twocolumn format), introduction and conclusion
are slightly modified; one postscript figure available at request from
[email protected]
Entanglement and thermodynamical analogies
We provide some new properties of entanglement of formation. In particular,
we obtain an additive lower bound for entanglement of formation. Subsequently
we develop the concept of local orthogonality of ensembles which leads to the
mixed states with distillable entanglement equal to entanglement of formation.
Then we consider thermodynamical analogies within the entanglement processing
domain. Especially, we exploit analogy entanglement -- energy. In this scheme
the total entanglement i.e. the amount of singlet pairs needed for local
preparation of a state corresponds to internal energy while the free
entanglement defined as the number of pairs which can be recovered from the
state (distillable entanglement) is the counterpart of free energy. In
particular, it leads us to the question about ``temperature'' of entanglement.
We also propose a scheme of the search of representative state for given
entanglement which can be viewed as an analogue of the Jaynes maximum entropy
principle.Comment: RevTeX, 11 page
Optimal compression of quantum information for one-qubit source at incomplete data: a new aspect of Jaynes principle
We consider the problem of optimal processing of quantum information at
incomplete experimental data characterizing the quantum source. In particular,
we then prove that for one-qubit quantum source the Jaynes principle offers a
simple scheme for optimal compression of quantum information. According to the
scheme one should process as if the density matrix of the source were actually
equal to the matrix of the Jaynes state.Comment: RevTeX, 4 pages, a simpler version of the proof for compression at
two-observable data has been provided, some minor changes has been mad
Unified approach to quantum capacities: towards quantum noisy coding theorem
Basing on unified approach to {\it all} kinds of quantum capacities we show
that the rate of quantum information transmission is bounded by the maximal
attainable rate of coherent information. Moreover, we show that, if for any
bipartite state the one-way distillable entanglement is no less than coherent
information, then one obtains Shannon-like formulas for all the capacities. The
inequality also implies that the decrease of distillable entanglement due to
mixing process does not exceed of corresponding loss information about a
system.Comment: 4 pages, Revte
General teleportation channel, singlet fraction and quasi-distillation
We prove a theorem on direct relation between the optimal fidelity
of teleportation and the maximal singlet fraction attainable by means
of trace-preserving LQCC action (local quantum and classical communication).
For a given bipartite state acting on we have . We assume completely general teleportation scheme
(trace preserving LQCC action over the pair and the third particle in unknown
state). The proof involves the isomorphism between quantum channels and a class
of bipartite states. We also exploit the technique of twirling
states (random application of unitary transformation of the above form) and the
introduced analogous twirling of channels. We illustrate the power of the
theorem by showing that {\it any} bound entangled state does not provide better
fidelity of teleportation than for the purely classical channel. Subsequently,
we apply our tools to the problem of the so-called conclusive teleportation,
then reduced to the question of optimal conclusive increasing of singlet
fraction. We provide an example of state for which Alice and Bob have no chance
to obtain perfect singlet by LQCC action, but still singlet fraction
arbitrarily close to unity can be obtained with nonzero probability. We show
that a slight modification of the state has a threshold for singlet fraction
which cannot be exceeded anymore.Comment: RevTeX, 14 pages, proposition in Sec. VI has been corrected, many
minor correction
On balance of information in bipartite quantum communication systems: entanglement-energy analogy
We adopt the view according to which information is the primary physical
entity that posseses objective meaning. Basing on two postulates that (i)
entanglement is a form of quantum information corresponding to internal energy
(ii) sending qubits corresponds to work, we show that in the closed bipartite
quantum communication systems the information is conserved. We also discuss
entanglement-energy analogy in context of the Gibbs-Hemholtz-like equation
connecting the entanglement of formation, distillable entanglement and bound
entanglement. Then we show that in the deterministic protocols of distillation
the information is conserved. We also discuss the objectivity of quantum
information in context of information interpretation of quantum states and
alghoritmic complexity.Comment: 8 pages, Revtex, extended version including discussion on
interpretation problems in particular objectivity of quantum informatio
Bound entanglement can be activated
Bound entanglement is the noisy entanglement which cannot be distilled to a
singlet form. Thus it cannot be used alone for quantum communication purposes.
Here we show that, nevertheless, the bound entanglement can be, in a sense,
pumped into single pair of free entangled particles. It allows for
teleportation via the pair with the fidelity impossible to achieve without
support of bound entanglement. The result also suggests that the distillable
entanglement may be not additive.Comment: RevTeX, 4 page
Mixed-state entanglement and quantum communication
We present basics of mixed-state entanglement theory. The first part of the
article is devoted to mathematical characterizations of entangled states. In
second part we discuss the question of using mixed-state entanglement for
quantum communication. In particular, a type of entanglement that is not
directly useful for quantum communcation (called bound entanglement) is
analysed in detail.Comment: 42 pages; the article is part of a book entitled {\it Quantum
Information: An Introduction to Basic Theoretical Concepts and Experiments}
by G. Alber, T. Beth, M. Horodecki, P. Horodecki, R. Horodecki, M. Rotteler,
H. Weinfurter, R. Werner and A. Zeilinger, published in {\it Springer Tracts
in Modern Physics}, July 200
Erratum: Asymptotic entanglement manipulations can be genuinely irreversible. [Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf 84}, 4260 (2000)]
This is erratum of the paper [Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf 84}, 4260 (2000)]Comment: 1 page, added date of Werner's earlier proof of bound for distillable
entanglement (Benasque, 1998
Jaynes principle versus entanglement
We show, by explicit examples, that the Jaynes inference scheme based on
maximization of entropy can produce inseparable states even if there exists a
separable state compatible with the measured data. It can lead to problems with
processing of entanglement. The difficulty vanishes when one uses inference
scheme based on minimization of entanglement.Comment: RevTeX, 6 pages, the paper was rewritten to present the problem
possibly clearl
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