English

Causal and localizable quantum operations

Quantum Physics 2009-11-07 v2 General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology High Energy Physics - Theory

Abstract

We examine constraints on quantum operations imposed by relativistic causality. A bipartite superoperator is said to be localizable if it can be implemented by two parties (Alice and Bob) who share entanglement but do not communicate; it is causal if the superoperator does not convey information from Alice to Bob or from Bob to Alice. We characterize the general structure of causal complete measurement superoperators, and exhibit examples that are causal but not localizable. We construct another class of causal bipartite superoperators that are not localizable by invoking bounds on the strength of correlations among the parts of a quantum system. A bipartite superoperator is said to be semilocalizable if it can be implemented with one-way quantum communication from Alice to Bob, and it is semicausal if it conveys no information from Bob to Alice. We show that all semicausal complete measurement superoperators are semilocalizable, and we establish a general criterion for semicausality. In the multipartite case, we observe that a measurement superoperator that projects onto the eigenspaces of a stabilizer code is localizable.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.quant-ph/0102043,
  title  = {Causal and localizable quantum operations},
  author = {David Beckman and Daniel Gottesman and M. A. Nielsen and John Preskill},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:quant-ph/0102043},
  year   = {2009}
}

Comments

23 pages, 7 figures, REVTeX, minor changes and references added