Maximum observable correlation for a bipartite quantum system
Abstract
The maximum observable correlation between the two components of a bipartite quantum system is a property of the joint density operator, and is achieved by making particular measurements on the respective components. For pure states it corresponds to making measurements diagonal in a corresponding Schmidt basis. More generally, it is shown that the maximum correlation may be characterised in terms of a `correlation basis' for the joint density operator, which defines the corresponding (nondegenerate) optimal measurements. The maximum coincidence rate for spin measurements on two-qubit systems is determined to be (1+s)/2, where s is the spectral norm of the spin correlation matrix, and upper bounds are obtained for n-valued measurements on general bipartite systems. It is shown that the maximum coincidence rate is never greater than the computable cross norm measure of entanglement, and a much tighter upper bound is conjectured. Connections with optimal state discrimination and entanglement bounds are briefly discussed.
Cite
@article{arxiv.quant-ph/0609076,
title = {Maximum observable correlation for a bipartite quantum system},
author = {Michael J. W. Hall and Erika Andersson and Thomas Brougham},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:quant-ph/0609076},
year = {2009}
}
Comments
Revtex, no figures