Projects per year
Abstract
Combining two entanglement-breaking channels into a correlated-noise environment restores the distribution of entanglement. Surprisingly, this reactivation can be induced by the injection of separable correlations from the composite environment. In any dimension (finite or infinite), we can construct classically-correlated "twirling" environments which are entanglement-breaking in the transmission of single systems but entanglement-preserving when two systems are transmitted. Here entanglement is simply preserved by the existence of decoherence-free subspaces. Remarkably, even when such subspaces do not exist, a fraction of the input entanglement can still be distributed. This is found in separable Gaussian environments, where distillable entanglement is able to survive the two-mode transmission, despite being broken in any single-mode transmission by the strong thermal noise. In the Gaussian setting, entanglement restoration is a threshold process, occurring only after a critical amount of correlations has been injected. Such findings suggest new perspectives for distributing entanglement in realistic environments with extreme decoherence, identifying separable correlations and classical memory effects as physical resources for "breaking entanglement-breaking".
Original language | English |
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Article number | 113046 |
Journal | New Journal of Physics |
Volume | 15 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Nov 2013 |
Projects
- 2 Finished
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Quantum probing of biological samples
Pirandola, S. (Principal investigator)
1/07/13 → 31/05/15
Project: Research project (funded) › Research
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High Rate Coherent Quantum Channels
Braunstein, S. L. (Principal investigator) & Pirandola, S. (Co-investigator)
1/12/11 → 30/11/14
Project: Research project (funded) › Research