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Tomography is Necessary for Universal Entanglement Detection with Single-Copy Observables

  • Dawei Lu
  • , Tao Xin
  • , Nengkun Yu
  • , Zhengfeng Ji
  • , Jianxin Chen
  • , Guilu Long
  • , Jonathan Baugh
  • , Xinhua Peng
  • , Bei Zeng
  • , Raymond Laflamme
  • University of Waterloo
  • Tsinghua University
  • CAS - Institute of Software
  • University of Maryland, College Park
  • University of Science and Technology of China
  • University of Guelph
  • Canadian Institute for Advanced Research
  • Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

44 Scopus citations

Abstract

Entanglement, one of the central mysteries of quantum mechanics, plays an essential role in numerous tasks of quantum information science. A natural question of both theoretical and experimental importance is whether universal entanglement detection can be accomplished without full state tomography. In this Letter, we prove a no-go theorem that rules out this possibility for nonadaptive schemes that employ single-copy measurements only. We also examine a previously implemented experiment [H. Park et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 105, 230404 (2010)], which claimed to detect entanglement of two-qubit states via adaptive single-copy measurements without full state tomography. In contrast, our simulation and experiment both support the opposite conclusion that the protocol, indeed, leads to full state tomography, which supplements our no-go theorem. These results reveal a fundamental limit of single-copy measurements in entanglement detection and provide a general framework of the detection of other interesting properties of quantum states, such as the positivity of partial transpose and the k-symmetric extendibility.

Original languageEnglish
Article number230501
JournalPhysical Review Letters
Volume116
Issue number23
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 7 2016

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