4.6 Article

Correlation Distance and Bounds for Mutual Information

Journal

ENTROPY
Volume 15, Issue 9, Pages 3698-3713

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/e15093698

Keywords

mutual information; variational distance; trace distance; Pinsker inequality; quantum entanglement

Funding

  1. ARC Centre of Excellence [CE110001027]

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The correlation distance quantifies the statistical independence of two classical or quantum systems, via the distance from their joint state to the product of the marginal states. Tight lower bounds are given for the mutual information between pairs of two-valued classical variables and quantum qubits, in terms of the corresponding classical and quantum correlation distances. These bounds are stronger than the Pinsker inequality (and refinements thereof) for relative entropy. The classical lower bound may be used to quantify properties of statistical models that violate Bell inequalities. Partially entangled qubits can have lower mutual information than can any two-valued classical variables having the same correlation distance. The qubit correlation distance also provides a direct entanglement criterion, related to the spin covariance matrix. Connections of results with classically-correlated quantum states are briefly discussed.

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