English

Conditional entropy and information of quantum processes

Quantum Physics 2024-11-01 v2 Mathematical Physics math.MP

Abstract

What would be a reasonable definition of the conditional entropy of bipartite quantum processes, and what novel insight would it provide? We develop this notion using four information-theoretic axioms and define the corresponding quantitative formulas. Our definitions of the conditional entropies of channels are based on the generalized state and channel divergences, for instance, quantum relative entropy. We find that the conditional entropy of quantum channels has potential to reveal insights for quantum processes that aren't already captured by the existing entropic functions, entropy or conditional entropy, of the states and channels. The von Neumann conditional entropy S[AB]NS[A|B]_{\mathcal{N}} of the channel NABAB\mathcal{N}_{A'B'\to AB} is based on the quantum relative entropy, with system pairs A,AA',A and B,BB',B being nonconditioning and conditioning systems, respectively. We identify a connection between the underlying causal structure of a bipartite channel and its conditional entropy. In particular, we provide a necessary and sufficient condition for a bipartite quantum channel NABAB\mathcal{N}_{A'B'\to AB} in terms of its von Neumann conditional entropy S[AB]NS[A|B]_{\mathcal{N}}, to have no causal influence from AA' to BB. As a consequence, if S[AB]N<logAS[A|B]_{\mathcal{N}}< -\log|A| then the channel necessarily has causal influence (signaling) from AA' to BB. Our definition of the conditional entropy establishes the strong subadditivity of the entropy for quantum channels. We also study the total amount of correlations possible due to quantum processes by defining the multipartite mutual information of quantum channels.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2410.01740,
  title  = {Conditional entropy and information of quantum processes},
  author = {Siddhartha Das and Kaumudibikash Goswami and Vivek Pandey},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2410.01740},
  year   = {2024}
}

Comments

Extended discussion with new observation, fixed bugs, and revised examples

R2 v1 2026-06-28T19:05:35.779Z