Local transformations of multiple multipartite states

Understanding multipartite entanglement is vital, as it underpins a wide range of phenomena across physics. The study of transformations of states via Local Operations assisted by Classical Communication (LOCC) allows one to quantitatively analyse entanglement, as it induces a partial order in th...

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Main Author: Antoine Neven, David Gunn, Martin Hebenstreit, Barbara Kraus
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SciPost 2021-08-01
Series:SciPost Physics
Online Access:https://scipost.org/SciPostPhys.11.2.042
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spelling doaj-135d98f4185946efb6a6c5be92f91a272021-08-30T11:36:49ZengSciPostSciPost Physics2542-46532021-08-0111204210.21468/SciPostPhys.11.2.042Local transformations of multiple multipartite statesAntoine Neven, David Gunn, Martin Hebenstreit, Barbara KrausUnderstanding multipartite entanglement is vital, as it underpins a wide range of phenomena across physics. The study of transformations of states via Local Operations assisted by Classical Communication (LOCC) allows one to quantitatively analyse entanglement, as it induces a partial order in the Hilbert space. However, it has been shown that, for systems with fixed local dimensions, this order is generically trivial, which prevents relating multipartite states to each other with respect to any entanglement measure. In order to obtain a non-trivial partial ordering, we study a physically motivated extension of LOCC: multi-state LOCC. Here, one considers simultaneous LOCC transformations acting on a finite number of entangled pure states. We study both multipartite and bipartite multi-state transformations. In the multipartite case, we demonstrate that one can change the stochastic LOCC (SLOCC) class of the individual initial states by only applying Local Unitaries (LUs). We show that, by transferring entanglement from one state to the other, one can perform state conversions not possible in the single copy case; provide examples of multipartite entanglement catalysis; and demonstrate improved probabilistic protocols. In the bipartite case, we identify numerous non-trivial LU transformations and show that the source entanglement is not additive. These results demonstrate that multi-state LOCC has a much richer landscape than single-state LOCC.https://scipost.org/SciPostPhys.11.2.042
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Antoine Neven, David Gunn, Martin Hebenstreit, Barbara Kraus
spellingShingle Antoine Neven, David Gunn, Martin Hebenstreit, Barbara Kraus
Local transformations of multiple multipartite states
SciPost Physics
author_facet Antoine Neven, David Gunn, Martin Hebenstreit, Barbara Kraus
author_sort Antoine Neven, David Gunn, Martin Hebenstreit, Barbara Kraus
title Local transformations of multiple multipartite states
title_short Local transformations of multiple multipartite states
title_full Local transformations of multiple multipartite states
title_fullStr Local transformations of multiple multipartite states
title_full_unstemmed Local transformations of multiple multipartite states
title_sort local transformations of multiple multipartite states
publisher SciPost
series SciPost Physics
issn 2542-4653
publishDate 2021-08-01
description Understanding multipartite entanglement is vital, as it underpins a wide range of phenomena across physics. The study of transformations of states via Local Operations assisted by Classical Communication (LOCC) allows one to quantitatively analyse entanglement, as it induces a partial order in the Hilbert space. However, it has been shown that, for systems with fixed local dimensions, this order is generically trivial, which prevents relating multipartite states to each other with respect to any entanglement measure. In order to obtain a non-trivial partial ordering, we study a physically motivated extension of LOCC: multi-state LOCC. Here, one considers simultaneous LOCC transformations acting on a finite number of entangled pure states. We study both multipartite and bipartite multi-state transformations. In the multipartite case, we demonstrate that one can change the stochastic LOCC (SLOCC) class of the individual initial states by only applying Local Unitaries (LUs). We show that, by transferring entanglement from one state to the other, one can perform state conversions not possible in the single copy case; provide examples of multipartite entanglement catalysis; and demonstrate improved probabilistic protocols. In the bipartite case, we identify numerous non-trivial LU transformations and show that the source entanglement is not additive. These results demonstrate that multi-state LOCC has a much richer landscape than single-state LOCC.
url https://scipost.org/SciPostPhys.11.2.042
work_keys_str_mv AT antoinenevendavidgunnmartinhebenstreitbarbarakraus localtransformationsofmultiplemultipartitestates
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