English

Superadditivity of communication capacity using entangled inputs

Quantum Physics 2019-07-17 v4

Abstract

The design of error-correcting codes used in modern communications relies on information theory to quantify the capacity of a noisy channel to send information [1]. This capacity can be expressed using the mutual information between input and output for a single use of the channel: although correlations between subsequent input bits are used to correct errors, they cannot increase the capacity. For quantum channels, it has been an open question whether entangled input states can increase the capacity to send classical information [2]. The additivity conjecture [3,4] states that entanglement does not help, making practical computations of the capacity possible. While additivity is widely believed to be true, there is no proof. Here we show that additivity is false, by constructing a random counter-example. Our results show that the most basic question of classical capacity of a quantum channel remains open, with further work needed to determine in which other situations entanglement can boost capacity.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0809.3972,
  title  = {Superadditivity of communication capacity using entangled inputs},
  author = {M. B. Hastings},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0809.3972},
  year   = {2019}
}

Comments

4 pages, 5 lemmas; minor typos fixed, minor changes to intro; additional typos fixed, minor clarifications; version in press, with minor additional typos fixed

R2 v1 2026-06-21T11:23:19.037Z