4.6 Article

Shareability of steering in 2-producible states

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW A
Volume 108, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevA.108.012216

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This study investigates quantum steering in a network scenario involving n parties, introducing different scenarios and analyzing the necessary steering criteria for different measurement settings. It finds that using a semi-random pair entanglement construction, one party can steer every other party for arbitrarily large n.
Quantum steering is the phenomenon whereby one party (Alice) proves entanglement by steering the system of another party (Bob) into distinct ensembles of states, by performing different measurements on her subsystem. Here, we investigate steering in a network scenario involving n parties, who each perform local measurements on part of a global quantum state, that is produced using only two-party entangled states, and mixing with ancillary separable states. We introduce three scenarios which can be straightforwardly implemented in standard quantum optics architecture, which we call random n 2 -pair entanglement, random pair entanglement, and semirandom pair entanglement. We study steerability of the states across two-party marginals which arise in the three scenarios, and analytically derive the necessary and sufficient steering criteria for different sets of measurement settings. Strikingly, using the semirandom pair entanglement construction, one party can steer every one of the n - 1 other parties, for arbitrarily large n, using only two measurements. Finally, exploiting symmetry, we study various small network configurations (three or four parties) in the three scenarios, under different measurements and produced by different two-party entangled states.

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