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Generalised monogamy relation of convex-roof extended negativity in multi-level systems.

Tian Tian1, Yu Luo1, Yongming Li1.   

Abstract

In this paper, we investigate the generalised monogamy inequalities of convex-roof extended negativity (CREN) in multi-level systems. The generalised monogamy inequalities provide the upper and lower bounds of bipartite entanglement, which are obtained by using CREN and the CREN of assistance (CRENOA). Furthermore, we show that the CREN of multi-qubit pure states satisfies some monogamy relations. Additionally, we test the generalised monogamy inequalities for qudits by considering the partially coherent superposition of a generalised W-class state in a vacuum and show that the generalised monogamy inequalities are satisfied in this case as well.

Entities:  

Year:  2016        PMID: 27857163      PMCID: PMC5114565          DOI: 10.1038/srep36700

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sci Rep        ISSN: 2045-2322            Impact factor:   4.379


Quantum entanglement is one of the most important physical resources in quantum information processing1234. As distinguished from classical correlations, quantum entanglement cannot be freely shared among many objects. We call this important phenomenon of quantum entanglement monogamy56. The property of monogamy may be as fundamental as the no-cloning theorem7, which gives rise to structures of entanglement in multipartite settings89. Some monogamy inequalities have been studied to apply entanglement to more useful quantum information processing. The property of monogamy property has been considered in many areas of physics: it can be used to extract an estimate of the quantity of information about a secret key captured by an eavesdropper in quantum cryptography1011, as well as the frustration effects observed in condensed matter physics1213 and even black-hole physics1415. The monogamy relation of entanglement is a way to characterise different types of entanglement distribution. The first monogamy relation was named the Coffman-Kundu-Wootters (CKW) inequality8. The monogamy property can be interpreted as the following statement: the amount of entanglement between A and B plus the amount of entanglement between A and C cannot be greater than the amount of entanglement between A and the BC pair. Osborne and Verstraete later proved that the CKW inequality also holds in an n-qubit system9. Other types of monogamy relations for entanglement were also proposed. Studies have found that the monogamy inequality holds in terms of some entanglement measures, negativity16, squared CREN17, entanglement of formation181920, Rényi entropy21 and Tsallis entropy2223. The monogamy property of other physical resources, such as discord and steering24, has also been discussed. There can be several inequivalent types of entanglement among the subsystems in multipartite quantum systems, and the amount of different types of entanglement might not be directly comparable to one another. Regula et al. studied multi-party quantum entanglement and found that there was strong monogamy25. Additionally, generalised monogamy relations of concurrence for N-qubit systems were also proposed by Zhu et al.26. In this paper, we study the generalised monogamy inequalities of CREN in multi-qubit systems. We first recall some basic concepts of entanglement measures. Then, monogamy inequalities are given by the concurrence and negativity of the n-qubit entanglement. Furthermore, we consider some states in a higher-dimensional quantum system and find that the generalised monogamy inequalities also hold for these states. We specifically test the generalised monogamy inequalities for qudits by considering the partially coherent superposition of a generalised W-class state in a vacuum, and we show that the generalised monogamy inequalities are satisfied in this case as well. These relations also give rise to a type of trade-off in inequalities that is related to the upper and lower bounds of CRENOA. It shows the bipartite entanglement between AB and the other qubits: especially under partition AB, a two-qubit system is different from the previous monogamy inequality that is typically used.

Results

This paper is organised as follows: in the first subsection, we recall some basic concepts of concurrence and negativity. We present the monogamy relations of concurrence and negativity in the second subsection. In the third subsection, the generalised monogamy inequalities of CREN are given. The fourth subsection includes some examples that verify these results.

Preliminaries: concurrence and negativity

For any bipartite pure state |ψ〉 in a d ⊗ d′ (d ≤ d′) quantum system with its Schmidt decomposition, the concurrence is defined as27 where ρ = tr (|ψ〉〈ψ|). For any mixed state ρ, its concurrence is defined as where the minimum is taken over all possible pure state decompositions {p, |ψ〉} of ρ. Similarly, the concurrence of assistance (COA) of ρ is defined as28 where the maximum is taken over all possible pure state decompositions {p, |ψ〉} of ρ. Another well-known quantification of bipartite entanglement is negativity. For any bipartite pure state |ψ〉, the negativity is where ρ = tr(|ψ〉〈ψ|). For any bipartite state ρ in the Hilbert space negativity is defined as29 where is a partial transposition with respect to the subsystem A, denotes the trace norm of X; i.e., . Negativity is a computable measure of entanglement, which is a convex function of ρ. It disappears if, and only if, ρ is separable for the 2 ⊗ 2 and 2 ⊗ 3 systems30. For the purposes of this discussion, we use the following definition of negativity: For any maximally entangled state in a two-qubit system, this negativity is equal to 1. CREN gives a perfect discrimination of positive partial transposition-bound entangled states and separable states in any bipartite quantum system3132. For any mixed state ρ, CREN is defined as where the minimum is taken over all possible pure state decompositions {p, |ψ〉} of ρ. For any mixed state ρ, CRENOA is defined as17 where the maximum is taken over all possible pure state decompositions {p, |ψ〉} of ρ. CREN is equivalent to concurrence for any pure state with Schmidt rank-217, and consequently, it follows that for any two-qubit mixed state ρ = ∑p|ψ〉〈ψ|: and where the minimum and the maximum are taken over all pure state decompositions {p, |ψ〉} of ρ.

Monogamy relations of concurrence and negativity

The CKW inequality8 was first defined as where is the concurrence of a three-qubit state ρ for any bipartite cut of subsystems between A and BC. Similarly, the dual inequality in terms of COA is as follows33: For any pure state in an n-qubit system A1⊗...⊗A, where A ≅ C2 for i = 1, ..., n, a generalisation of the CKW inequality is The dual inequality in terms of the COA for n-qubit states has the form17 when the rank of the matrix is 2, we have Combining Eq. (10) with Eq. (11), we have where i, j ∈ {1, ..., n}, i ≠ j. For any n-qubit pure state , we have The dual inequality17 in terms of CRENOA is as follows:

Monogamy inequalities of CREN

For a 2 ⊗ 2 ⊗ m quantum pure state |ψ〉, it has been shown that 33, where is the three-tangle of concurrence. is the concurrence under bipartition A|BC for pure state |ψ〉. Namely, Similarly, considering that CREN is equivalent to concurrence by Eq. (17), we have The concurrence is related to the linear entropy of a state34 Given a bipartite state ρ, T(ρ) has the property35, From the definition of pure state concurrence in Eq. (2) together with Eq. (22), we have Now, we provide the following theorems: Theorem 1. For any 2 ⊗ 2 ⊗ 2 tripartite mixed state ρ we have Proof. Let ρ = ∑p|ψ〉〈ψ| be an optimal decomposition realising ; that is, where ρ = Tr|ψ〉〈ψ|, ρ = Tr|ψ〉〈ψ| and ρ = Tr|ψ〉〈ψ|, and we have Combining Eq. (23) with Eq. (24), we have The third equality holds because CREN and concurrence are equal for any rank-2 pure state. Therefore, we obtain Combining Eq. (26) with Eq. (29), we finally get Thus, the proof is completed. Theorem 1 shows a simple relationship of CRENOA in a tripartite quantum system. The monogamy inequality shows that the entanglement A|BC cannot be greater than the sum of the entanglement B|AC and the entanglement C|AB. Taking an easy example, when considering a three-qubit state, the following equation exists: |ψ〉 = a|010〉 + b|100〉 where |a|2 + |b|2 = 1. Using a simple calculation, the following equation can be obtained: where the state |ψ〉 saturates the monogamy inequality in Eq. (25). Moreover, the iteration of Eq. (25) leads us to the generalized monogamy inequality in multi-qubit quantum systems. Corollary 1. For any multi-party mixed state in an n-qubit system36, the following monogamy inequality exists: The meaning of the first inequality is clear the bipartite entanglement between and the other qubits, when taken as a group cannot be greater than the sum of the n − 1 individual bipartite entanglements between and the other remaining qubits. We now start to consider a four-qubit system. As shown in Fig. 1, the squared CRENOA with respect to the bipartition (A|BCD) is not greater than the sum of the three squared CRENOAs (the three possible bipartitions are B|ACD, C|ABD and D|ABC).
Figure 1

The example shows the reciprocal relation of squared CRENOA in a four-qubit system.

The meaning of the second inequality is clear the sum of the bipartite entanglements between and the other remaining qubits cannot be greater than the sum of the bipartite entanglements . Theorem 2. For any n-qubit pure state , we have where , and . Proof. From the result of Theorem 1, we find that the generalised monogamy inequality can be easily obtained by using the superposition of states. We now consider . When the rank of the matrix is 2, we have Combining Eq. (23) with Eq. (24), we get the relationship The third equality follows from the fact that CREN and concurrence are equal for any rank-2 pure state. For a mixed state, CRENOA is expressed as , and we have Furthermore, when combining this with Eq. (35), we finally get and Combining Eq. (37) with Eq. (38), we have Eq. (32). In other words, we give an upper bound about , i.e., This completes the proof. Theorem 2 shows that the entanglement between AB and the other qubits cannot be greater than the sum of the individual entanglements between A and each of the n − 1 remaining qubits and the individual entanglements between B and each of the n − 1 remaining qubits. Theorem 2 provides a polygamy-type upper bound of multi-qubit entanglement between the two-qubit system AB and the other (n − 2)-qubit system C1C2...C in terms of the squared CRENOA. Especially under partition AB, a two-qubit system is different from the previous monogamy inequality. When , the calculation results in . Consequently, the polygamy-type relation is obtained as shown in Eq. (19). Finally, consider the following four-qubit state: |ψ〉 = a|0100〉 + b|0010〉 + c|0001〉 where |a|2 + |b|2 + |c|2 = 1. We can easily get the following equations: and . Therefore, the state |ψ〉 saturates the monogamy inequality in Eq. (32). Theorem 3. For any n-qubit pure state , where , and . Proof. We have the following property for linear entropy35: Combining Eq. (24) with Eq. (41), we have and By using the equivalent relation between concurrence and CREN (see Eq. (17)), we have There is a relationship between CREN and CRENOA (see Eq. (21)): Putting the above two equalities into Eq. (44), we get Similar to the above derivation, we give a lower bound about , i.e., This lower bound is a direct consequence of CREN. Theorem 3 shows that the entanglement between AB and the other qubits cannot be less than the absolute value of the difference between both the individual entanglements between A and each of the n − 1 remaining qubits and the individual entanglements between B and each of the n − 1 remaining qubits. Theorem 3 provides a monogamy-type lower bound of multi-qubit entanglement between the two-qubit system AB and the other (n − 2)-qubit system C1C2...C in terms of the squared CRENOA. When , , and so we obtain the CWK-type relation in Eq. (18). Finally, we consider the following four-qubit state |ψ〉 = a|1000〉 + b|0010〉 + c|0001〉 where |a|2 + |b|2 + |c|2 = 1, from which we can easily obtain the following equations: and . Therefore, the state |ψ〉 saturates the monogamy inequality in Eq. (40). Therefore, a generalised monogamy inequality using negativity and CRENOA in an n-qubit is proposed. These relations also give rise to a type of trade-off in inequalities that is related to the upper and lower bounds of CRENOA. Remark. It is interesting to note that the properties of CREN are based on the subadditivity of linear entropy. However, negativity violates this subadditivity in general conditions373839.

Examples

In this section, we use some special states to study generalised monogamy inequalities. First, we consider the (Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger) GHZ state and W state in Examples 1 and 2. Second, we consider two states in the higher-dimensional system in Examples 3 and 4. Example 1. For an arbitrary pure GHZ state in an n-qubit system: where |a|2 + |b|2 = 1. The generalized GHZ state is satisfied with the previous CKW inequality. We will now show that the generalised GHZ state satisfies the generalised monogamy inequalities. We have ρ1 = ρ2 = … = ρ = a2|0〉〈0| + b2|1〉〈1|. It is straightforward to check: and , . Therefore: Example 2. For a pure state |W〉 in an n-qubit system: with . It is very important to understand the saturation of the previous CKW inequality. Using a simple calculation, we have . It is straightforward to check: , . In the same way, we get the following inequalities: From the above results, we discover that the generalised GHZ state and W state satisfy our inequalities. We further explore the condition of the generalised inequalities in higher-dimensional systems. We consider the following examples: Example 3. For a pure, totally antisymmetric state |ψ〉 in a 3 ⊗ 3 ⊗ 3 system40: This special quantum state is not satisfied with the previous CKW inequality41 but it is established in generalised monogamy inequalities. We can easily obtain and further obtain the inequalities . We now explore theorems 2 and 3. First, we have and . Therefore, we obtain the following inequalities: Example 4. The n-qudit generalised W-class state in higher-dimensional quantum systems is very useful in quantum information theory42. We verify whether the generalised monogamy inequalities hold in higher-dimensional systems using a special example. First, we recall the definition of n-qudit generalised W-class state43, where . Let be an n-qudit pure state in a superposition of an n-qudit generalised W-class state and vacuum; that is, for some 0 ≤ p ≤ 1. For the squared negativity of with respect to the bipartition between A1 and the other qudits, the reduced density matrix of onto subsystem A1 is obtained as where . When considering the  state, we need to obtain the eigenvalue of the matrix by applying the definition of pure state negativity in Eq. (5). Using a simple calculation, we find that the matrix has rank-2 and we have We now consider the case in which n = 2. The remaining cases follow analogously. The two-qudit reduced density matrix of is obtained as where . For convenient calculation, we consider two unnormalised states: Consequently, can be represented as where and are unnormalised states of the subsystems A1A2. By the HJW theorem44, any pure-state decomposition , with size r > 2 can be obtained by an r × r unitary matrix u such that for each h, for the normalized state   with . We apply the definition of mixed state negativity in Eqs (8 and 63), and then we have the two-tangle based on the CREN of as where . From the definition of pure state negativity in Eqs (9 and 63), we have We now try to verify the generalised monogamy inequalities of CREN in an n-qudit system. For convenient calculation, we assume that , , , We first consider the generalisation of Theorem 1. This special quantum state is satisfied with the generalised monogamy inequality in Eq. (25) i.e., For the generalisation of Theorem 2, the left of Eq. (32) is Using Eqs (8 and 62) we can simplify the calculation to and After some calculations, we have Second, taking Eq. (67) to the right side of Eq. (32), we then have After a straightforward calculation, we obtain Therefore, this n-qudit pure state is satisfied with the generalised monogamy inequality in Eq. (32). In other words, the test of the Theorem 2 has been accomplished. Next, we verify Theorem 3. First, we consider the term CREN from Eq. (40): Calculating the absolute value of the difference between Eqs (72 and 76), we obtain It is easy to check 4p2 (a − a2 − ab + b2 − b) > 0, as After a straightforward calculation, we have Therefore, this n-qudit pure state satisfies the generalised monogamy inequality in Eq. (40). We have now verified the generalised monogamy inequalities. In other words, the generalised monogamy inequality are satisfied with the n-qudit pure state for all three of our theorems.

Conclusions

In this paper, we have used CREN to study different types of monogamy relations. In particular, we have shown that CREN satisfies the generalised monogamy inequalities. We have investigated the CKW-like inequalities and generalised monogamy inequalities. Furthermore, the generalised monogamy inequalities related to CREN and CRENOA were obtained by n-qubit states. These relations also give rise to a type of trade-off in inequalities that is related to the upper and lower bounds of CRENOA. Finally, we have shown that the partially coherent superposition of the generalised W-class state and vacuum extensions of CREN satisfies the generalised monogamy inequalities. We believe that the generalised monogamy inequalities can be useful in quantum information theory. This paper was based on the linear entropy. To continue this work, we will study the nature of other entropy further in the future work. We hope that our work will be useful to the quantum physics.

Additional Information

How to cite this article: Tian, T. et al. Generalised monogamy relation of convex-roof extended negativity in multi-level systems. Sci. Rep. 6, 36700; doi: 10.1038/srep36700 (2016). Publisher’s note: Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
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