Entanglement witnessing by arbitrarily many independent observers
recycling a local quantum shared state
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2109.10310v2
- Date: Thu, 27 Jan 2022 18:40:43 GMT
- Title: Entanglement witnessing by arbitrarily many independent observers
recycling a local quantum shared state
- Authors: Chirag Srivastava, Mahasweta Pandit, Ujjwal Sen
- Abstract summary: An observer, Alice, shares a two-qubit state with an arbitrary number of observers, Bobs, via sequentially and independently recycling the qubit in possession of the first Bob.
It is known that there exist entangled states which can be used to have an arbitrarily long sequence of Bobs who can violate the Clauser-Horne-Shimony-Holt (CHSH) Bell inequality with the single Alice.
We show that there exist entangled states that do not violate the Bell inequality and whose entanglement can be detected by an arbitrary number of Bobs.
- Score: 0.0
- License: http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/
- Abstract: We investigate the scenario where an observer, Alice, shares a two-qubit
state with an arbitrary number of observers, Bobs, via sequentially and
independently recycling the qubit in possession of the first Bob. It is known
that there exist entangled states which can be used to have an arbitrarily long
sequence of Bobs who can violate the Clauser-Horne-Shimony-Holt (CHSH) Bell
inequality with the single Alice. We show that there exist entangled states
that do not violate the Bell inequality and whose entanglement can be detected
by an arbitrary number of Bobs by suitably choosing the entanglement witness
operator and the unsharp measurement settings by the Bobs. This proves that the
set of states that can be used to witness entanglement sequentially is larger
than those that can witness sequential violation of local realism. There exist,
therefore, two-party quantum correlations that are Bell "classical", but whose
entanglement "nonclassicality" can be witnessed sequentially and independently
by an arbitrarily large number of observers at one end of the shared state with
the single observer at the other end.
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