One-shot decoupling
Abstract
If a quantum system A, which is initially correlated to another system, E, undergoes an evolution separated from E, then the correlation to E generally decreases. Here, we study the conditions under which the correlation disappears (almost) completely, resulting in a decoupling of A from E. We give a criterion for decoupling in terms of two smooth entropies, one quantifying the amount of initial correlation between A and E, and the other characterizing the mapping that describes the evolution of A. The criterion applies to arbitrary such mappings in the general one-shot setting. Furthermore, the criterion is tight for mappings that satisfy certain natural conditions. Decoupling has a number of applications both in physics and information theory, e.g., as a building block for quantum information processing protocols. As an example, we give a one-shot state merging protocol and show that it is essentially optimal in terms of its entanglement consumption/production.
Cite
@article{arxiv.1012.6044,
title = {One-shot decoupling},
author = {Frédéric Dupuis and Mario Berta and Jürg Wullschleger and Renato Renner},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1012.6044},
year = {2014}
}
Comments
v2: improved converse theorem, v3: published version