A Fundamental Theorem on Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen Steering
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2512.22030v1
- Date: Fri, 26 Dec 2025 13:59:38 GMT
- Title: A Fundamental Theorem on Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen Steering
- Authors: Yu-Xuan Zhang, Jing-Ling Chen,
- Abstract summary: Quantum nonlocality is an essential nonlocality resource in quantum information.<n>In 1991, Gisin presented a fundamental theorem on Bell's nonlocality, pointing out all pure entangled states possess Bell's nonloclaity.<n>In this work, we present a Gisin-like fundamental theorem on EPR steering, which indicates all rank-2 entangled states possess EPR steerability.
- Score: 5.478582839093083
- License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
- Abstract: Quantum nonlocality is an essential nonlocality resource in quantum information. It has been classified into three distinct types: quantum entanglement, Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen (EPR) steering, and Bell's nonlocality. In 1991, Gisin presented a fundamental theorem on Bell's nonlocality, pointing out all pure entangled states possess Bell's nonloclaity. Many of the core protocols of quantum information science (such as quantum teleportation, quantum key distribution, and certain algorithms in quantum computing) rely on entanglement. Gisin's theorem tells us that as long as we successfully prepare a pure entangled state, we then have a Bell-nonlocality resource that can show the non-classical correlations. Such a resource is not ``virtual'' and can be tested and used through Bell-experiments. Similarly, in this work, we present a Gisin-like fundamental theorem on EPR steering, which indicates all rank-2 (and rank-1) entangled states possess EPR steerability. Thus all rank-2 entangled states can be applicable as EPR-steering resources in quantum information.
Related papers
- Notes on Bell states and quantum teleportation [7.031150803377215]
Bell states and quantum teleportation play important roles in the study of quantum information and computation.<n>This work aims to investigate important algebraic properties of generalized Bell states as well as explore topological features of quantum teleportation.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2026-02-11T09:47:34Z) - Activation of post-quantum steering [0.0]
We show how to activate post-quantum steering so that it can now be witnessed as post-quantum correlations in a Bell scenario.<n>One element of our work that may be of independent interest is we show how to self-test a bipartite quantum assemblage in a network.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-06-15T09:17:12Z) - Geometric measures of quantum nonlocality: characterization, quantification, and comparison by distances and operations [0.7611870296994722]
We introduce a framework for studying Bell nonlocality in Hilbert space.<n>Nonlocality is quantified by the distance between the state and the set of local states.<n>We derive explicit geometric measures of nonlocality for Bell-diagonal, Werner, and isotropic states.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-11-03T14:26:58Z) - Simple Tests of Quantumness Also Certify Qubits [69.96668065491183]
A test of quantumness is a protocol that allows a classical verifier to certify (only) that a prover is not classical.
We show that tests of quantumness that follow a certain template, which captures recent proposals such as (Kalai et al., 2022) can in fact do much more.
Namely, the same protocols can be used for certifying a qubit, a building-block that stands at the heart of applications such as certifiable randomness and classical delegation of quantum computation.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-03-02T14:18:17Z) - Detection of Beyond-Quantum Non-locality based on Standard Local Quantum
Observables [46.03321798937856]
We show that device independent detection cannot distinguish beyond-quantum non-local states from standard quantum states.
This paper gives a device dependent detection based on local observables to distinguish any beyond-quantum non-local state from all standard quantum states.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-01-10T20:19:34Z) - Is there a finite complete set of monotones in any quantum resource theory? [39.58317527488534]
We show that there does not exist a finite set of resource monotones which completely determines all state transformations.
We show that totally ordered theories allow for free transformations between all pure states.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-12-05T18:28:36Z) - Testing real quantum theory in an optical quantum network [1.6720048283946962]
We show that tests in the spirit of a Bell inequality can reveal quantum predictions in entanglement swapping scenarios.
We disproving real quantum theory as a universal physical theory.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-11-30T05:09:36Z) - Certifying beyond quantumness of locally quantum no-signalling theories
through quantum input Bell test [0.0]
Physical theories constrained with local quantum structure and satisfying the no-signalling principle can allow beyond-quantum global states.
In a standard Bell experiment, correlations obtained from any such beyond-quantum bipartite state can always be reproduced by quantum states and measurements.
We show that if the Bell experiment is generalized to allow local quantum inputs, then beyond-quantum correlations can be generated by every beyond-quantum state.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-11-07T04:58:02Z) - Bell nonlocality in networks [62.997667081978825]
Bell's theorem proves that quantum theory is inconsistent with local physical models.
In the last decade, the investigation of nonlocality has moved beyond Bell's theorem to consider more sophisticated experiments.
This review discusses the main concepts, methods, results and future challenges in the emerging topic of Bell nonlocality in networks.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-04-21T18:00:48Z) - Secure quantum communication through a wormhole [0.0]
The ER=EPR conjecture is employed to introduce unitary quantum teleportation protocol.
It is shown that the protocol guarantees the unconditional security of the quantum communication.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-03-27T21:08:23Z) - Operational Resource Theory of Imaginarity [48.7576911714538]
We show that quantum states are easier to create and manipulate if they only have real elements.
As an application, we show that imaginarity plays a crucial role for state discrimination.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-07-29T14:03:38Z) - From a quantum theory to a classical one [117.44028458220427]
We present and discuss a formal approach for describing the quantum to classical crossover.
The method was originally introduced by L. Yaffe in 1982 for tackling large-$N$ quantum field theories.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-04-01T09:16:38Z) - Quantum Mechanical description of Bell's experiment assumes Locality [91.3755431537592]
Bell's experiment description assumes the (Quantum Mechanics-language equivalent of the classical) condition of Locality.
This result is complementary to a recently published one demonstrating that non-Locality is necessary to describe said experiment.
It is concluded that, within the framework of Quantum Mechanics, there is absolutely no reason to believe in the existence of non-Local effects.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-02-27T15:04:08Z)
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.