LOCC, or local operations and classical communication, is a method in
quantum information theory
Quantum information is the information of the state of a quantum system. It is the basic entity of study in quantum information theory, and can be manipulated using quantum information processing techniques. Quantum information refers to both ...
where a local (product) operation is performed on part of the system, and where the result of that operation is "communicated" classically to another part where usually another local operation is performed conditioned on the information received.
Mathematical properties
The formal definition of the set of LOCC operations is complicated due to the fact that later local operations depend in general on all the previous classical communication and due to the unbounded number of communication rounds. For any finite number
one can define
, the set of LOCC operations that can be achieved with
rounds of classical communication. The set becomes strictly larger whenever
is increased and care has to be taken to define the limit of infinitely many rounds. In particular, the set LOCC is not topologically closed, that is there are quantum operations that can be approximated arbitrarily closely by LOCC but that are not themselves LOCC.
A ''one-round'' LOCC
is a
quantum instrument , for which the trace-non-increasing
completely positive map
In mathematics a positive map is a map between C*-algebras that sends positive elements to positive elements. A completely positive map is one which satisfies a stronger, more robust condition.
Definition
Let A and B be C*-algebras. A linear ...
s (CPMs)
are local for all measurement results
, i.e.,
and there is one site
such that only at
the map
is not trace-preserving. This means that the instrument can be realized by the party at site
applying the (local) instrument
and communicating the classical result
to all other parties, which then each perform (conditioned on
) trace-preserving (deterministic) local quantum operations
.
Then
are defined recursively as those operations that can be realized by following up an operation
with a
-operation. Here it is allowed that the party, which performs the follow-up operations depends on the result of the previous rounds. Moreover, we allow also "coarse-graining", i.e., discarding some of the classical information encoded in the measurement results (of all rounds).
The union of all
operations is denoted by
and contains instruments that can be approximated better and better with more LOCC rounds. It topological closure
contains ''all'' such operations.
It can be shown that all these sets are different:
:
The set of all LOCC operations is contained in the set
of all ''separable operations''.
contains all operations that can be written using
Kraus operators that have all product form, i.e.,
:
with
. Not all operations in
are LOCC,
:
i.e., there are examples that cannot be implemented locally even with infinite rounds of communication.
LOCC are the "free operations" in the
resource theories of entanglement: Entanglement cannot be produced from separable states with LOCC and if the local parties in addition to being able to perform all LOCC operations are also furnished with some entangled states, they can realize more operations than with LOCC alone.
Examples
LOCC operations are useful for ''state preparation'', ''state discrimination'', and ''entanglement transformations''.
State preparation
Alice and Bob are given a two quantum system in the product state
. Their task is to produce the separable state
. With local operations alone this cannot be achieved, since they cannot produce the (classical) correlations present in
. But with LOCC (with one round of communication)
can be prepared: Alice throws an unbiased coin (that shows heads or tails each with 50% probability) and flips her qubit (to
) if the coin shows "tails", otherwise it is left unchanged. She then sends the result of the coin-flip (classical information) to Bob who also flips his qubit if he receives the message "tails". The resulting state is
. In general, ''all''
separable state
In quantum mechanics, separable states are quantum states belonging to a composite space that can be factored into individual states belonging to separate subspaces. A state is said to be entangled if it is not separable. In general, determinin ...
s (and only these) can be prepared from a product states with LOCC operations alone.
State discrimination
Given two quantum states
on a bi- or multipartite
Hilbert space
In mathematics, Hilbert spaces (named after David Hilbert) allow generalizing the methods of linear algebra and calculus from (finite-dimensional) Euclidean vector spaces to spaces that may be infinite-dimensional. Hilbert spaces arise natu ...
, the task is to determine which one of two (or more) possible states
it is. As a simple example, consider the two
Bell state
The Bell states or EPR pairs are specific quantum states of two qubits that represent the simplest (and maximal) examples of quantum entanglement; conceptually, they fall under the study of quantum information science. The Bell states are a fo ...
s
:
:
Let's say the two-
qubit
In quantum computing, a qubit () or quantum bit is a basic unit of quantum information—the quantum version of the classic binary bit physically realized with a two-state device. A qubit is a two-state (or two-level) quantum-mechanical system, ...
system is separated, where the first qubit is given to Alice and the second is given to Bob. Without communication, Alice and Bob cannot distinguish the two states, since for all local measurements all measurement statistics are exactly the same (both states have the same reduced density matrix). E.g., assume that Alice measures the first qubit, and obtains the result 0. Since this result is equally likely to occur (with probability 50%) in each of the two cases, she does not gain any information on which Bell pair she was given and the same holds for Bob if he performs any measurement. But now let Alice send her result to Bob over a classical channel. Now Bob can compare his result to hers and if they are the same he can conclude that the pair given was
, since only this allows for a joint measurement outcome
. Thus with LOCC and two measurements these two states can be distinguished perfectly. Note that with global (
nonlocal or
entangled) measurements, a single measurement (on the joint
Hilbert space
In mathematics, Hilbert spaces (named after David Hilbert) allow generalizing the methods of linear algebra and calculus from (finite-dimensional) Euclidean vector spaces to spaces that may be infinite-dimensional. Hilbert spaces arise natu ...
) is sufficient to distinguish these two (mutually
orthogonal
In mathematics, orthogonality is the generalization of the geometric notion of '' perpendicularity''.
By extension, orthogonality is also used to refer to the separation of specific features of a system. The term also has specialized meanings in ...
) states.
There are quantum states that cannot be distinguished with LOCC operations.
Entanglement transformations
While LOCC cannot ''generate'' entangled states out of product states, they can be used to transform entangled states into other entangled states. The restriction to LOCC severely limits which transformations are possible.
Entanglement conversion
Nielsen has derived a general condition to determine whether one pure state of a bipartite quantum system may be transformed into another using only LOCC. Full details may be found in the paper referenced earlier, the results are sketched out here.
Consider two particles in a
Hilbert space
In mathematics, Hilbert spaces (named after David Hilbert) allow generalizing the methods of linear algebra and calculus from (finite-dimensional) Euclidean vector spaces to spaces that may be infinite-dimensional. Hilbert spaces arise natu ...
of dimension
with particle states
and
with
Schmidt decompositions
:
:
The
's are known as
Schmidt coefficients. If they are ordered largest to smallest (i.e., with
) then
can only be transformed into
using only local operations if and only if for all
in the range
:
In more concise notation:
:
This is a more restrictive condition than that local operations cannot increase
entanglement measures. It is quite possible that
and
have the same amount of entanglement but converting one into the other is not possible and even that conversion in either direction is impossible because neither set of Schmidt coefficients
majorises the other. For large
if all
Schmidt coefficients are non-zero then the probability of one set of coefficients
majorising the other becomes negligible. Therefore, for large
the probability of any arbitrary state being convertible into another via LOCC becomes negligible.
The operations described so far are deterministic, i.e., they succeed with probability 100%. If one is satisfied by ''probabilistic'' transformations, many more transformations are possible using LOCC.
These operations are called ''stochastic'' LOCC (SLOCC). In particular for multi-partite states the convertibility under SLOCC is studied to gain a qualitative insight into the entanglement properties of the involved states.
Going beyond LOCC: Catalytic conversion
If entangled states are available as a resource, these together with LOCC allow a much larger class of transformations. This is the case even if these resource states are not consumed in the process (as they are, for example, in
quantum teleportation). Thus transformations are called ''entanglement catalysis''. In this procedure, the conversion of an initial state to a final state that is impossible with LOCC is made possible by taking a tensor product of the initial state with a "catalyst state"
and requiring that this state is still available at the end of the conversion process. I.e., the catalyst state is left unchanged by the conversion and can then be removed, leaving only the desired final state. Consider the states,
:
:
:
These states are written in the form of
Schmidt decomposition and in a descending order. We compare the sum of the coefficients of
and
:::
In the table, red color is put if
, green color is put if
, and white color is remained if
. After building up the table, one can easily to find out whether
and
are convertible by looking at the color in the
direction.
can be converted into
by LOCC if the color are all green or white, and
can be converted into
by LOCC if the color are all red or white. When the table presents both red and green color, the states are not convertible.
Now we consider the product states
and
:
:
:
Similarly, we make up the table:
:::
The color in the
direction are all green or white, therefore, according to the Nielsen's theorem,
is possible to be converted into
by the LOCC. The ''catalyst'' state
is taken away after the conversion. Finally we find
by the LOCC.
If correlations between the system and the catalyst are allowed, catalytic transformations between bipartite pure states are characterized via the
entanglement entropy.
In more detail, a pure state
can be converted into another pure state
via catalytic LOCC if and only if
,
where
is the
von Neumann entropy, and
and
are the
reduced states of
and
, respectively. In general, the conversion is not exact, but can be performed with an arbitrary accuracy. The amount of correlations between the system and the catalyst can also be made arbitrarily small.
See also
*
Quantum teleportation
References
Further reading
*''https://quantiki.org/wiki/locc-operations''
*
{{Quantum computing
Quantum information science