Entanglement and secret-key-agreement capacities of bipartite quantum interactions and read-only memory devices

Journal Article (2020)
Author(s)

Siddhartha Das (Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Louisiana State University)

S.M.G. Bäuml (Barcelona Institute of Science and Technology (BIST), TU Delft - QuTech Advanced Research Centre, TU Delft - QID/Elkouss Group, NTT Corporation)

Mark M. Wilde (Louisiana State University)

Research Group
QID/Elkouss Group
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevA.101.012344
More Info
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Publication Year
2020
Language
English
Research Group
QID/Elkouss Group
Issue number
1
Volume number
101

Abstract

A bipartite quantum interaction corresponds to the most general quantum interaction that can occur between two quantum systems in the presence of a bath. In this work, we determine bounds on the capacities of bipartite interactions for entanglement generation and secret-key agreement between two quantum systems. Our upper bound on the entanglement generation capacity of a bipartite quantum interaction is given by a quantity called the bidirectional max-Rains information. Our upper bound on the secret-key-agreement capacity of a bipartite quantum interaction is given by a related quantity called the bidirectional max-relative entropy of entanglement. We also derive tighter upper bounds on the capacities of bipartite interactions obeying certain symmetries. Observing that reading of a memory device is a particular kind of bipartite quantum interaction, we leverage our bounds from the bidirectional setting to deliver bounds on the capacity of a task that we introduce, called private reading of a wiretap memory cell. Given a set of point-to-point quantum wiretap channels, the goal of private reading is for an encoder to form codewords from these channels, in order to establish a secret key with a party who controls one input and one output of the channels, while a passive eavesdropper has access to one output of the channels. We derive both lower and upper bounds on the private reading capacities of a wiretap memory cell. We then extend these results to determine achievable rates for the generation of entanglement between two distant parties who have coherent access to a controlled point-to-point channel, which is a particular kind of bipartite interaction.

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