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Entanglement Theory Quantum Correlations
Computable limits of optical multiple-access communications
arXiv
Authors: Haowei Shi, Quntao Zhuang
Year
2021
Paper ID
61006
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
155
Citations
N/A
Abstract
Communication rates over quantum channels can be boosted by entanglement, via superadditivity phenomena or entanglement assistance. Superadditivity refers to the capacity improvement from entangling inputs across multiple channel uses. Nevertheless, when unlimited entanglement assistance is available, the entanglement between channel uses becomes unnecessary - the entanglement-assisted (EA) capacity of a single-sender and single-receiver channel is additive. We generalize the additivity of EA capacity to general multiple-access channels (MACs) for the total communication rate. Furthermore, for optical communication modelled as phase-insensitive bosonic Gaussian MACs, we prove that the optimal total rate is achieved by Gaussian entanglement and therefore can be efficiently evaluated. To benchmark entanglement's advantage, we propose computable outer bounds for the capacity region without entanglement assistance. Finally, we formulate an EA version of minimum entropy conjecture, which leads to the additivity of the capacity region of phase-insensitive bosonic Gaussian MACs if it is true. The computable limits confirm entanglement's boosts in optical multiple-access communications.
Why This Paper Matters
- This paper contributes to the Entanglement Theory & Quantum Correlations research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
- It adds a 2021 reference point for readers tracking recent quantum research.
- Communication rates over quantum channels can be boosted by entanglement, via superadditivity phenomena or entanglement assistance.
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