Separable state

Last updated

In quantum mechanics, separable states are multipartite quantum states that can be written as a convex combination of product states. Product states are multipartite quantum states that can be written as a tensor product of states in each space. The physical intuition behind these definitions is that product states have no correlation between the different degrees of freedom, while separable states might have correlations, but all such correlations can be explained as due to a classical random variable, as opposed as being due to entanglement.

Contents

In the special case of pure states the definition simplifies: a pure state is separable if and only if it is a product state.

A state is said to be entangled if it is not separable. In general, determining if a state is separable is not straightforward and the problem is classed as NP-hard.

Separability of bipartite systems

Consider first composite states with two degrees of freedom, referred to as bipartite states. By a postulate of quantum mechanics these can be described as vectors in the tensor product space . In this discussion we will focus on the case of the Hilbert spaces and being finite-dimensional.

Pure states

Let and be orthonormal bases for and , respectively. A basis for is then , or in more compact notation . From the very definition of the tensor product, any vector of norm 1, i.e. a pure state of the composite system, can be written as

where is a constant. If can be written as a simple tensor, that is, in the form with a pure state in the i-th space, it is said to be a product state, and, in particular, separable. Otherwise it is called entangled. Note that, even though the notions of product and separable states coincide for pure states, they do not in the more general case of mixed states.

Pure states are entangled if and only if their partial states are not pure. To see this, write the Schmidt decomposition of as

where are positive real numbers, is the Schmidt rank of , and and are sets of orthonormal states in and , respectively. The state is entangled if and only if . At the same time, the partial state has the form

It follows that is pure --- that is, is projection with unit-rank --- if and only if , which is equivalent to being separable.

Physically, this means that it is not possible to assign a definite (pure) state to the subsystems, which instead ought to be described as statistical ensembles of pure states, that is, as density matrices. A pure state is thus entangled if and only if the von Neumann entropy of the partial state is nonzero.

Formally, the embedding of a product of states into the product space is given by the Segre embedding. [1] That is, a quantum-mechanical pure state is separable if and only if it is in the image of the Segre embedding.

The above discussion can be extended to the case of when the state space is infinite-dimensional with virtually nothing changed.[ clarification needed ]

Mixed states

Consider the mixed state case. A mixed state of the composite system is described by a density matrix acting on . ρ is separable if there exist , and which are mixed states of the respective subsystems such that

where

Otherwise is called an entangled state. We can assume without loss of generality in the above expression that and are all rank-1 projections, that is, they represent pure ensembles of the appropriate subsystems. It is clear from the definition that the family of separable states is a convex set.

Notice that, again from the definition of the tensor product, any density matrix, indeed any matrix acting on the composite state space, can be trivially written in the desired form, if we drop the requirement that and are themselves states and If these requirements are satisfied, then we can interpret the total state as a probability distribution over uncorrelated product states.

In terms of quantum channels, a separable state can be created from any other state using local actions and classical communication while an entangled state cannot.

When the state spaces are infinite-dimensional, density matrices are replaced by positive trace class operators with trace 1, and a state is separable if it can be approximated, in trace norm, by states of the above form.

If there is only a single non-zero , then the state can be expressed just as and is called simply separable or product state. One property of the product state is that in terms of entropy,

Extending to the multipartite case

The above discussion generalizes easily to the case of a quantum system consisting of more than two subsystems. Let a system have n subsystems and have state space . A pure state is separable if it takes the form

Similarly, a mixed state ρ acting on H is separable if it is a convex sum

Or, in the infinite-dimensional case, ρ is separable if it can be approximated in the trace norm by states of the above form.

Separability criterion

The problem of deciding whether a state is separable in general is sometimes called the separability problem in quantum information theory. It is considered to be a difficult problem. It has been shown to be NP-hard in many cases [2] [3] and is believed to be so in general. Some appreciation for this difficulty can be obtained if one attempts to solve the problem by employing the direct brute force approach, for a fixed dimension. We see that the problem quickly becomes intractable, even for low dimensions. Thus more sophisticated formulations are required. The separability problem is a subject of current research.

A separability criterion is a necessary condition a state must satisfy to be separable. In the low-dimensional (2 X 2 and 2 X 3) cases, the Peres-Horodecki criterion is actually a necessary and sufficient condition for separability. Other separability criteria include (but not limited to) the range criterion, reduction criterion, and those based on uncertainty relations. [4] [5] [6] [7] See Ref. [8] for a review of separability criteria in discrete variable systems.

In continuous variable systems, the Peres-Horodecki criterion also applies. Specifically, Simon [9] formulated a particular version of the Peres-Horodecki criterion in terms of the second-order moments of canonical operators and showed that it is necessary and sufficient for -mode Gaussian states (see Ref. [10] for a seemingly different but essentially equivalent approach). It was later found [11] that Simon's condition is also necessary and sufficient for -mode Gaussian states, but no longer sufficient for -mode Gaussian states. Simon's condition can be generalized by taking into account the higher order moments of canonical operators [12] [13] or by using entropic measures. [14] [15]

Characterization via algebraic geometry

Quantum mechanics may be modelled on a projective Hilbert space, and the categorical product of two such spaces is the Segre embedding. In the bipartite case, a quantum state is separable if and only if it lies in the image of the Segre embedding. Jon Magne Leinaas, Jan Myrheim and Eirik Ovrum in their paper "Geometrical aspects of entanglement" [16] describe the problem and study the geometry of the separable states as a subset of the general state matrices. This subset have some intersection with the subset of states holding Peres-Horodecki criterion. In this paper, Leinaas et al. also give a numerical approach to test for separability in the general case.

Testing for separability

Testing for separability in the general case is an NP-hard problem. [2] [3] Leinaas et al. [16] formulated an iterative, probabilistic algorithm for testing if a given state is separable. When the algorithm is successful, it gives an explicit, random, representation of the given state as a separable state. Otherwise it gives the distance of the given state from the nearest separable state it can find.

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Quantum teleportation</span> Physical phenomenon

Quantum teleportation is a technique for transferring quantum information from a sender at one location to a receiver some distance away. While teleportation is commonly portrayed in science fiction as a means to transfer physical objects from one location to the next, quantum teleportation only transfers quantum information. The sender does not have to know the particular quantum state being transferred. Moreover, the location of the recipient can be unknown, but to complete the quantum teleportation, classical information needs to be sent from sender to receiver. Because classical information needs to be sent, quantum teleportation cannot occur faster than the speed of light.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Quantum entanglement</span> Correlation between quantum systems

Quantum entanglement is the phenomenon that occurs when a duet of particles are generated, interact, or share spatial proximity in such a way that the quantum state of each particle of the group cannot be described independently of the state of the others, including when the particles are separated by a large distance. The topic of quantum entanglement is at the heart of the disparity between classical and quantum physics: entanglement is a primary feature of quantum mechanics not present in classical mechanics.

In quantum mechanics, a density matrix is a matrix that describes the quantum state of a physical system. It allows for the calculation of the probabilities of the outcomes of any measurement performed upon this system, using the Born rule. It is a generalization of the more usual state vectors or wavefunctions: while those can only represent pure states, density matrices can also represent mixed states. Mixed states arise in quantum mechanics in two different situations:

  1. when the preparation of the system is not fully known, and thus one must deal with a statistical ensemble of possible preparations, and
  2. when one wants to describe a physical system that is entangled with another, without describing their combined state; this case is typical for a system interacting with some environment.
<span class="mw-page-title-main">Quantum decoherence</span> Loss of quantum coherence

Quantum decoherence is the loss of quantum coherence, the process in which a system's behaviour changes from that which can be explained by quantum mechanics to that which can be explained by classical mechanics. In quantum mechanics, particles such as electrons are described by a wave function, a mathematical representation of the quantum state of a system; a probabilistic interpretation of the wave function is used to explain various quantum effects. As long as there exists a definite phase relation between different states, the system is said to be coherent. A definite phase relationship is necessary to perform quantum computing on quantum information encoded in quantum states. Coherence is preserved under the laws of quantum physics.

In quantum physics, a measurement is the testing or manipulation of a physical system to yield a numerical result. A fundamental feature of quantum theory is that the predictions it makes are probabilistic. The procedure for finding a probability involves combining a quantum state, which mathematically describes a quantum system, with a mathematical representation of the measurement to be performed on that system. The formula for this calculation is known as the Born rule. For example, a quantum particle like an electron can be described by a quantum state that associates to each point in space a complex number called a probability amplitude. Applying the Born rule to these amplitudes gives the probabilities that the electron will be found in one region or another when an experiment is performed to locate it. This is the best the theory can do; it cannot say for certain where the electron will be found. The same quantum state can also be used to make a prediction of how the electron will be moving, if an experiment is performed to measure its momentum instead of its position. The uncertainty principle implies that, whatever the quantum state, the range of predictions for the electron's position and the range of predictions for its momentum cannot both be narrow. Some quantum states imply a near-certain prediction of the result of a position measurement, but the result of a momentum measurement will be highly unpredictable, and vice versa. Furthermore, the fact that nature violates the statistical conditions known as Bell inequalities indicates that the unpredictability of quantum measurement results cannot be explained away as due to ignorance about "local hidden variables" within quantum systems.

In quantum mechanics, einselections, short for "environment-induced superselection", is a name coined by Wojciech H. Zurek for a process which is claimed to explain the appearance of wavefunction collapse and the emergence of classical descriptions of reality from quantum descriptions. In this approach, classicality is described as an emergent property induced in open quantum systems by their environments. Due to the interaction with the environment, the vast majority of states in the Hilbert space of a quantum open system become highly unstable due to entangling interaction with the environment, which in effect monitors selected observables of the system. After a decoherence time, which for macroscopic objects is typically many orders of magnitude shorter than any other dynamical timescale, a generic quantum state decays into an uncertain state which can be expressed as a mixture of simple pointer states. In this way the environment induces effective superselection rules. Thus, einselection precludes stable existence of pure superpositions of pointer states. These 'pointer states' are stable despite environmental interaction. The einselected states lack coherence, and therefore do not exhibit the quantum behaviours of entanglement and superposition.

The Peres–Horodecki criterion is a necessary condition, for the joint density matrix of two quantum mechanical systems and , to be separable. It is also called the PPT criterion, for positive partial transpose. In the 2×2 and 2×3 dimensional cases the condition is also sufficient. It is used to decide the separability of mixed states, where the Schmidt decomposition does not apply. The theorem was discovered in 1996 by Asher Peres and the Horodecki family

<span class="mw-page-title-main">LOCC</span> Method in quantum computation and communication

LOCC, or local operations and classical communication, is a method in quantum information theory where a local (product) operation is performed on part of the system, and where the result of that operation is "communicated" classically to another part where usually another local operation is performed conditioned on the information received.

In functional analysis and quantum information science, a positive operator-valued measure (POVM) is a measure whose values are positive semi-definite operators on a Hilbert space. POVMs are a generalization of projection-valued measures (PVM) and, correspondingly, quantum measurements described by POVMs are a generalization of quantum measurement described by PVMs.

The W state is an entangled quantum state of three qubits which in the bra-ket notation has the following shape

In linear algebra, the Schmidt decomposition refers to a particular way of expressing a vector in the tensor product of two inner product spaces. It has numerous applications in quantum information theory, for example in entanglement characterization and in state purification, and plasticity.

In the case of systems composed of subsystems, the classification of quantum-entangledstates is richer than in the bipartite case. Indeed, in multipartite entanglement apart from fully separable states and fully entangled states, there also exists the notion of partially separable states.

Entanglement distillation is the transformation of N copies of an arbitrary entangled state into some number of approximately pure Bell pairs, using only local operations and classical communication.

In quantum mechanics, and especially quantum information theory, the purity of a normalized quantum state is a scalar defined as

In quantum mechanics, negativity is a measure of quantum entanglement which is easy to compute. It is a measure deriving from the PPT criterion for separability. It has shown to be an entanglement monotone and hence a proper measure of entanglement.

In quantum information theory and quantum optics, the Schrödinger–HJW theorem is a result about the realization of a mixed state of a quantum system as an ensemble of pure quantum states and the relation between the corresponding purifications of the density operators. The theorem is named after physicists and mathematicians Erwin Schrödinger, Lane P. Hughston, Richard Jozsa and William Wootters. The result was also found independently by Nicolas Gisin, and by Nicolas Hadjisavvas building upon work by Ed Jaynes, while a significant part of it was likewise independently discovered by N. David Mermin. Thanks to its complicated history, it is also known by various other names such as the GHJW theorem, the HJW theorem, and the purification theorem.

The quantum Fisher information is a central quantity in quantum metrology and is the quantum analogue of the classical Fisher information. The quantum Fisher information of a state with respect to the observable is defined as

In quantum physics, the "monogamy" of quantum entanglement refers to the fundamental property that it cannot be freely shared between arbitrarily many parties.

The entanglement of formation is a quantity that measures the entanglement of a bipartite quantum state.

Bell diagonal states are a class of bipartite qubit states that are frequently used in quantum information and quantum computation theory.

References

  1. Gharahi, Masoud; Mancini, Stefano; Ottaviani, Giorgio (October 1, 2020). "Fine-structure classification of multiqubit entanglement by algebraic geometry". Physical Review Research. 2 (4): 043003. arXiv: 1910.09665 . Bibcode:2020PhRvR...2d3003G. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevResearch.2.043003 . S2CID   204824024.
  2. 1 2 Gurvits, L., Classical deterministic complexity of Edmonds’ problem and quantum entanglement, in Proceedings of the 35th ACM Symposium on Theory of Computing, ACM Press, New York, 2003.
  3. 1 2 Sevag Gharibian, Strong NP-Hardness of the Quantum Separability Problem, Quantum Information and Computation, Vol. 10, No. 3&4, pp. 343-360, 2010. arXiv:0810.4507.
  4. Hofmann, Holger F.; Takeuchi, Shigeki (September 22, 2003). "Violation of local uncertainty relations as a signature of entanglement". Physical Review A. 68 (3): 032103. arXiv: quant-ph/0212090 . Bibcode:2003PhRvA..68c2103H. doi:10.1103/PhysRevA.68.032103. S2CID   54893300.
  5. Gühne, Otfried (March 18, 2004). "Characterizing Entanglement via Uncertainty Relations". Physical Review Letters. 92 (11): 117903. arXiv: quant-ph/0306194 . Bibcode:2004PhRvL..92k7903G. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.92.117903. PMID   15089173. S2CID   5696147.
  6. Gühne, Otfried; Lewenstein, Maciej (August 24, 2004). "Entropic uncertainty relations and entanglement". Physical Review A. 70 (2): 022316. arXiv: quant-ph/0403219 . Bibcode:2004PhRvA..70b2316G. doi:10.1103/PhysRevA.70.022316. S2CID   118952931.
  7. Huang, Yichen (July 29, 2010). "Entanglement criteria via concave-function uncertainty relations". Physical Review A. 82 (1): 012335. Bibcode:2010PhRvA..82a2335H. doi:10.1103/PhysRevA.82.012335.
  8. Gühne, Otfried; Tóth, Géza (2009). "Entanglement detection". Physics Reports. 474 (1–6): 1–75. arXiv: 0811.2803 . Bibcode:2009PhR...474....1G. doi:10.1016/j.physrep.2009.02.004. S2CID   119288569.
  9. Simon, R. (2000). "Peres-Horodecki Separability Criterion for Continuous Variable Systems". Physical Review Letters. 84 (12): 2726–2729. arXiv: quant-ph/9909044 . Bibcode:2000PhRvL..84.2726S. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.84.2726. PMID   11017310. S2CID   11664720.
  10. Duan, Lu-Ming; Giedke, G.; Cirac, J. I.; Zoller, P. (2000). "Inseparability Criterion for Continuous Variable Systems". Physical Review Letters. 84 (12): 2722–2725. arXiv: quant-ph/9908056 . Bibcode:2000PhRvL..84.2722D. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.84.2722. PMID   11017309. S2CID   9948874.
  11. Werner, R. F.; Wolf, M. M. (2001). "Bound Entangled Gaussian States". Physical Review Letters. 86 (16): 3658–3661. arXiv: quant-ph/0009118 . Bibcode:2001PhRvL..86.3658W. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.86.3658. PMID   11328047. S2CID   20897950.
  12. Shchukin, E.; Vogel, W. (2005). "Inseparability Criteria for Continuous Bipartite Quantum States". Physical Review Letters. 95 (23): 230502. arXiv: quant-ph/0508132 . Bibcode:2005PhRvL..95w0502S. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.95.230502. PMID   16384285. S2CID   28595936.
  13. Hillery, Mark; Zubairy, M.Suhail (2006). "Entanglement Conditions for Two-Mode States". Physical Review Letters. 96 (5): 050503. arXiv: quant-ph/0507168 . Bibcode:2006PhRvL..96e0503H. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.96.050503. PMID   16486912. S2CID   43756465.
  14. Walborn, S.; Taketani, B.; Salles, A.; Toscano, F.; de Matos Filho, R. (2009). "Entropic Entanglement Criteria for Continuous Variables". Physical Review Letters. 103 (16): 160505. arXiv: 0909.0147 . Bibcode:2009PhRvL.103p0505W. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.103.160505. PMID   19905682. S2CID   10523704.
  15. Yichen Huang (October 2013). "Entanglement Detection: Complexity and Shannon Entropic Criteria". IEEE Transactions on Information Theory. 59 (10): 6774–6778. doi:10.1109/TIT.2013.2257936. S2CID   7149863.
  16. 1 2 "Geometrical aspects of entanglement", Physical Review A 74, 012313 (2006)