Entanglement-assisted guessing of complementary measurement outcomes

Journal Article (2014)
Author(s)

Mario Berta (California Institute of Technology)

Patrick J. Coles (National University of Singapore, University of Waterloo)

Stephanie Wehner (National University of Singapore, TU Delft - Quantum Information and Software)

Research Group
Quantum Information and Software
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevA.90.062127
More Info
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Publication Year
2014
Language
English
Research Group
Quantum Information and Software
Issue number
6
Volume number
90
Pages (from-to)
1-10

Abstract

Heisenberg's uncertainty principle implies that if one party (Alice) prepares a system and randomly measures one of two incompatible observables, then another party (Bob) cannot perfectly predict the measurement outcomes. This implication assumes that Bob does not possess an additional system that is entangled to the measured one; indeed, the seminal paper of Einstein, Podolsky, and Rosen (EPR) showed that maximal entanglement allows Bob to perfectly win this guessing game. Although not in contradiction, the observations made by EPR and Heisenberg illustrate two extreme cases of the interplay between entanglement and uncertainty. On the one hand, no entanglement means that Bob's predictions must display some uncertainty. Yet on the other hand, maximal entanglement means that there is no more uncertainty at all. Here we follow an operational approach and give an exact relation—an equality—between the amount of uncertainty as measured by the guessing probability and the amount of entanglement as measured by the recoverable entanglement fidelity. From this equality, we deduce a simple criterion for witnessing bipartite entanglement and an entanglement monogamy equality.

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