Entanglement
cost of generalised measurements
(pp405-422)
Richard Jozsa, M. Koashi, N. Linden, Sandu Popescu, S. Presnell, D.
Shepherd, and
Andreas
Winter
doi:
https://doi.org/10.26421/QIC3.5-2
Abstracts:
Bipartite entanglement is one of the fundamental
quantifiable resources of quantum information theory. We propose a new
application of this resource to the theory of quantum measurements.
According to Naimark's theorem any rank 1 generalised measurement (POVM)
M may be represented as a von Neumann measurement in an extended (tensor
product) space of the system plus ancilla. By considering a suitable
average of the entanglements of these measurement directions and
minimising over all Naimark extensions, we define a notion of
entanglement cost E_{\min}(M) of M. We give a constructive means of
characterising all Naimark extensions of a given POVM. We identify
various classes of POVMs with zero and non-zero cost and explicitly
characterise all POVMs in 2 dimensions having zero cost. We prove a
constant upper bound on the entanglement cost of any POVM in any
dimension. Hence the asymptotic entanglement cost (i.e. the large n
limit of the cost of n applications of M, divided by n) is zero for all
POVMs. The trine measurement is defined by three rank 1 elements, with
directions symmetrically placed around a great circle on the Bloch
sphere. We give an analytic expression for its entanglement cost.
Defining a normalised cost of any $d$-dimensional POVM by E_{\min}
(M)/\log_2 d, we show (using a combination of analytic and numerical
techniques) that the trine measurement is more costly than any other
POVM with d>2, or with d=2 and ancilla dimension 2. This strongly
suggests that the trine measurement is the most costly of all POVMs.
Key words:
entanglement, Naimark extensions, generalized measurements, trine
measurement |