Quantum data processing inequality bounds the set of bipartite states that
can be generated by two far apart parties under local operations; Having access
to a bipartite state as a resource, two parties cannot locally transform it to
another bipartite state with a mutual information greater than that of the
resource state. But due to the additivity of quantum mutual information under
tensor product, the data processing inequality gives no bound when the parties
are provided with arbitrary number of copies of the resource state. In this
paper we introduce a measure of correlation on bipartite quantum states, called
maximal correlation, that is not additive and gives the same number when
computed for multiple copies. Then by proving a data processing inequality for
this measure, we find a bound on the set of states that can be generated under
local operations even when an arbitrary number of copies of the resource state
is available.Comment: 12 pages, fixed an error in the statement of Theorem 2 (thanks to
Dong Yang