4.6 Article

Strong Converse Exponents for a Quantum Channel Discrimination Problem and Quantum-Feedback-Assisted Communication

Journal

COMMUNICATIONS IN MATHEMATICAL PHYSICS
Volume 344, Issue 3, Pages 797-829

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00220-016-2645-4

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. Department of Physics and Astronomy at LSU
  2. NSF [CCF-1350397]
  3. DARPA Quiness Program through US Army Research Office Award [W31P4Q-12-1-0019]
  4. European Research Council Advanced Grant IRQUAT
  5. Spanish MINECO [FIS2013-40627-P]
  6. Generalitat de Catalunya CIRIT [2014 SGR 966]
  7. Hungarian Research Grant OTKA-NKFI [K104206]
  8. Technische Universitat Munchen-Institute for Advanced Study
  9. German Excellence Initiative
  10. European Union Seventh Framework Programme [291763]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This paper studies the difficulty of discriminating between an arbitrary quantum channel and a replacer channel that discards its input and replaces it with a fixed state. The results obtained here generalize those known in the theory of quantum hypothesis testing for binary state discrimination. We show that, in this particular setting, the most general adaptive discrimination strategies provide no asymptotic advantage over non-adaptive tensor-power strategies. This conclusion follows by proving a quantum Stein's lemma for this channel discrimination setting, showing that a constant bound on the Type I error leads to the Type II error decreasing to zero exponentially quickly at a rate determined by the maximum relative entropy registered between the channels. The strong converse part of the lemma states that any attempt to make the Type II error decay to zero at a rate faster than the channel relative entropy implies that the Type I error necessarily converges to one. We then refine this latter result by identifying the optimal strong converse exponent for this task. As a consequence of these results, we can establish a strong converse theorem for the quantum-feedback-assisted capacity of a channel, sharpening a result due to Bowen. Furthermore, our channel discrimination result demonstrates the asymptotic optimality of a non-adaptive tensor-power strategy in the setting of quantum illumination, as was used in prior work on the topic. The sandwiched R,nyi relative entropy is a key tool in our analysis. Finally, by combining our results with recent results of Hayashi and Tomamichel, we find a novel operational interpretation of the mutual information of a quantum channel as the optimal Type II error exponent when discriminating between a large number of independent instances of and an arbitrary worst-case replacer channel chosen from the set of all replacer channels.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available