| Literature DB >> 23828242 |
Jing-Ling Chen1, Xiang-Jun Ye, Chunfeng Wu, Hong-Yi Su, Adán Cabello, L C Kwek, C H Oh.
Abstract
Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen steering is a form of quantum nonlocality intermediate between entanglement and Bell nonlocality. Although Schrödinger already mooted the idea in 1935, steering still defies a complete understanding. In analogy to "all-versus-nothing" proofs of Bell nonlocality, here we present a proof of steering without inequalities rendering the detection of correlations leading to a violation of steering inequalities unnecessary. We show that, given any two-qubit entangled state, the existence of certain projective measurement by Alice so that Bob's normalized conditional states can be regarded as two different pure states provides a criterion for Alice-to-Bob steerability. A steering inequality equivalent to the all-versus-nothing proof is also obtained. Our result clearly demonstrates that there exist many quantum states which do not violate any previously known steering inequality but are indeed steerable. Our method offers advantages over the existing methods for experimentally testing steerability, and sheds new light on the asymmetric steering problem.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23828242 PMCID: PMC3701892 DOI: 10.1038/srep02143
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1The steering scenario illustration.
Alice first prepares a two-qubit state and keeps one qubit. She then sends the other qubit to Bob and announces that it is entangled with the one she possesses (see the pair of red balls and green arrows). Thus she could remotely “steer” Bob's state by projective measurements. However, Bob does not trust Alice and he worries that she may fabricate the results using her knowledge about LHS. In the two-setting steering scenario, Bob asks Alice to perform two specific projective measurements on her qubit (see the red dashed arrow) and to let him know the measurement results (see the blue dashed arrow). After Alice's measurement (see the measurement device), Bob obtains four conditional states (see the dashed circle). Alice could cheat Bob if there exists an ensemble (see the gray box with colored particles) and a stochastic map, such that the set of equations (1) holds. To be convinced that Alice can steer his state, Bob needs to confirm that no such hidden states are possible.
Figure 2(a) Detecting steerability of the state (2) using the ten-setting steering inequalities.We explore the steering of state (2) via violation of the ten-setting inequality presented in Ref. 15. The colors denote different values of quantum violation, as scaled in the legend. The blank region indicates that steerability of (2) cannot be detected by this inequality. With the replacement and in the above inequality, one obtains a similar steering inequality to show Bob's ability of steering Alice's state. The inequality yields the same violation region. This indicates that steering inequalities in Ref. 15 cannot reveal asymmetric steering. (b) Detecting steerability using the steering inequality (3). We show the steering of the state ρcol through violation of inequality (3). Quantum prediction of the left-hand-side of the inequality always succeeds 0 unless V = 0 or θ = 0, π/2.