English

Quantum Network Discrimination

Quantum Physics 2023-07-26 v2 Information Theory Mathematical Physics math.IT math.MP

Abstract

Discrimination between objects, in particular quantum states, is one of the most fundamental tasks in (quantum) information theory. Recent years have seen significant progress towards extending the framework to point-to-point quantum channels. However, with technological progress the focus of the field is shifting to more complex structures: Quantum networks. In contrast to channels, networks allow for intermediate access points where information can be received, processed and reintroduced into the network. In this work we study the discrimination of quantum networks and its fundamental limitations. In particular when multiple uses of the network are at hand, the rooster of available strategies becomes increasingly complex. The simplest quantum network that capturers the structure of the problem is given by a quantum superchannel. We discuss the available classes of strategies when considering nn copies of a superchannel and give fundamental bounds on the asymptotically achievable rates in an asymmetric discrimination setting. Furthermore, we discuss achievability, symmetric network discrimination, the strong converse exponent, generalization to arbitrary quantum networks and finally an application to an active version of the quantum illumination problem.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2103.02404,
  title  = {Quantum Network Discrimination},
  author = {Christoph Hirche},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2103.02404},
  year   = {2023}
}

Comments

39 pages, 1 Table, 9 Figures incl. 1 Animation. v2: Several improvements and clarifications. Version accepted for publication