Undoing Causal Effects of a Causal Broadcast Channel with Cooperating
Receivers using Entanglement Resources
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2102.07427v1
- Date: Mon, 15 Feb 2021 10:05:04 GMT
- Title: Undoing Causal Effects of a Causal Broadcast Channel with Cooperating
Receivers using Entanglement Resources
- Authors: Stephen DiAdamo and Janis N\"otzel
- Abstract summary: We analyse a communication scenario over a causal broadcast channel whose state depends on a modulo sum.
We find that when the receivers can share entanglement and communicate classically, they can receive messages at a non-zero rate with verifiable secure collaboration.
- Score: 0.0
- License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
- Abstract: We analyse a communication scenario over a particular causal broadcast
channel whose state depends on a modulo sum. The receivers of the broadcast
receive channel state information and collaborate to determine the channel
state as to decode their private messages. Further, the receivers of the
broadcast can collude up to the minimum non-collusion condition to determine
state information of the other non-colluding receivers. We analyse three
resource scenarios for the receivers: receivers can share entanglement without
classically communicating, can just use classical communication, or have both
entanglement and classical communication. Using results from secure multi-party
communication, we find that when the receivers can share entanglement and
communicate classically, they can receive messages from the sender at a
non-zero rate with verifiable secure collaboration. In the entanglement only
case a positive capacity is not possible. In the classical communication case,
a non-zero rate of communication is achievable but the communication complexity
overhead grows quadratically in the number of receivers versus linear in the
number of receivers with entanglement.
Related papers
- Enhancing Quantum State Discrimination with Indefinite Causal Order [3.368751927358015]
We study a noisy discrimination scenario using a protocol based on indefinite causal order.
We find that, for certain channels and ensembles, the guessing probability can be significantly improved.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-06-27T17:51:46Z) - Three-Receiver Quantum Broadcast Channels: Classical Communication with Quantum Non-unique Decoding [44.37825061268399]
In network communication, there is a hierarchy among receivers based on information they decode due.
This hierarchy may result in varied information quality, such as higher-quality video for certain receivers.
We explore three-receiver quantum broadcast channels with two- and three-degraded message sets.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-06-14T09:07:53Z) - The Multiple-Access Channel with Entangled Transmitters [67.92544792239086]
Communication over a classical multiple-access channel (MAC) with entanglement resources is considered.
We establish inner and outer bounds on the capacity region for the general MAC with entangled transmitters.
Using superdense coding, entanglement can double the conferencing rate.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-03-18T16:51:08Z) - Fault-tolerant Coding for Entanglement-Assisted Communication [46.0607942851373]
This paper studies the study of fault-tolerant channel coding for quantum channels.
We use techniques from fault-tolerant quantum computing to establish coding theorems for sending classical and quantum information in this scenario.
We extend these methods to the case of entanglement-assisted communication, in particular proving that the fault-tolerant capacity approaches the usual capacity when the gate error approaches zero.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-10-06T14:09:16Z) - Quantum Multiple-Access One-Time Pad [9.137554315375919]
We introduce and analyze an information theoretical task that we call the quantum multiple-access one-time pad.
A number of senders initially share a correlated quantum state with a receiver and an eavesdropper.
We derive a single-letter characterization for the achievable rate region in a limit of infinitely many copies and vanishingly small error.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-08-25T11:43:24Z) - Adaptive advantage in entanglement-assisted communications [0.0]
Entanglement-assisted classical communication protocols usually consist of two successive rounds.
We show that adaptive protocols improve the success probability in Random Access Codes.
We briefly discuss extension of these ideas to scenarios involving quantum communication.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-03-10T13:54:02Z) - Communication with Unreliable Entanglement Assistance [78.7611537027573]
Entanglement resources can increase transmission rates substantially.
In order to generate entanglement for optical communication, the transmitter first prepares an entangled photon pair locally.
Without feedback, the transmitter does not know whether the entangled photon has reached the receiver.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-12-16T22:24:56Z) - Random-Receiver Quantum Communication [0.4893345190925177]
We introduce the task of random-receiver quantum communication, in which a sender transmits a quantum message to a receiver chosen from a list of n spatially separated parties.
The choice of receiver is unknown to the sender, but is known by the n parties, who coordinate their actions by exchanging classical messages.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-12-31T05:57:15Z) - Quantum Broadcast Channels with Cooperating Decoders: An
Information-Theoretic Perspective on Quantum Repeaters [78.7611537027573]
Communication over a quantum broadcast channel with cooperation between the receivers is considered.
We develop lower and upper bounds on the capacity region in each setting.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-11-18T11:58:48Z) - FedRec: Federated Learning of Universal Receivers over Fading Channels [92.15358738530037]
We propose a neural network-based symbol detection technique for downlink fading channels.
Multiple users collaborate to jointly learn a universal data-driven detector, hence the name FedRec.
The performance of the resulting receiver is shown to approach the MAP performance in diverse channel conditions without requiring knowledge of the fading statistics.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-11-14T11:29:55Z) - Permutation Enhances Classical Communication Assisted by Entangled
States [67.12391801199688]
We show that the capacity satisfies the strong converse property and thus the formula serves as a sharp dividing line between achievable and unachievable rates of communication.
As examples, we derive analytically the classical capacity of various quantum channels of interests.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-01-07T01:49:31Z)
This list is automatically generated from the titles and abstracts of the papers in this site.
This site does not guarantee the quality of this site (including all information) and is not responsible for any consequences.