Title: Oded Regev
1Simulating Quantum Correlations with Finite
Communication
Oded Regev (Tel Aviv University) Ben
Toner (CWI, Amsterdam)
2Outline
3The Problem
4The CHSH game
- Alice gets a bit a and outputs a bit ?
- Bob gets a bit b and outputs a bit ?
- Goal ???a?b (i.e., output bits should be equal
unless ab1) - No communication is allowed
- Best strategy is to always output 0 they get 3
out of the 4 possible questions right - Moreover, even if they share a random string,
their average success probability is at most 75 - However, if they share an EPR state, they can get
success probability 85 for each of the 4
questions
5Simulating Quantum Correlations
- Fix some bipartite quantum state ?
- Alice gets a matrix A with ?1 eigenvalues
outputs a bit ??-1,1 - Bob gets a matrix B with ?1 eigenvalues outputs
a bit ??-1,1 - Goal the correlation E?? should satisfy
- E?? Tr(A?B ? ?)
- If the parties share ?, this is easy
- Without shared entanglement, impossible
- However, what happens if we allow classical
communication between Alice and Bob? How many
bits do they need to exchange to simulate quantum
correlations?
6Simulating Quantum Correlations(classical
reformulation Tsirelson87)
- Alice gets a unit vector a?Rn and
- outputs a bit ??-1,1
- Bob gets a unit vector b?Rn and
- outputs a bit ??-1,1
- Goal the correlation E?? should satisfy
- E?? ?a,b?
?a,b?1 ?a,b?0 ?a,b?-1
a
a
a
b
b
b
7Example CHSH
- Consider the special case in which Alice gets
either - a0(1,0) or a1(0,1)
- and Bob gets either
- b0(1,1)/?2 or b1(1,-1)/?2.
- Then ?ai,bj? -½ if ij1 and ½ otherwise
- Hence their goal is to output
- bits ?,? such that ??? with
- probability 85 if ij1, and
- ?? with probability 85
- otherwise
b0
a1
a0
b1
8Previous Work
- Problem introduced by several authors
Maudlin92,Steiner00,BrassardCleveTapp99 - In the naïve protocol, Alice simply sends her
vector to Bob this requires infinite
communication - For the case n3 (EPR state), several protocols
were developed BrassardCleveTapp99, Csirek00,
CerfGisinMassar00 with the best one requiring
only one bit of communication TonerBacon03 - For the general problem, best known protocol
requires ?n/2? bits TonerBacon06 - Another protocol achieves only logn/2 bits, but
only on average (worst case communication is
unbounded) DegorreLaplanteRoland07
9New Result
The problem can be solved with only 2 bits of
communication
10Getting strong enough correlations
11A Naïve Protocol with No Communication
1
-1
12A Naïve Protocol with No Communication
-1
1
1
a
-1
b
13Resulting Correlation Function
desired
result
14The Orthant Protocol
- Alice and Bob project their vectors on a random
k-dimensional subspace - Alice tells Bob which of the 2k orthants her
vector lies in, and outputs 1 - Bob outputs 1 or -1 depending on whether his
vector lies in the half-space determined by the
orthant - This uses k bits of
- communication
- (easy to improve to k-1)
1
-1
a
15Analysis of the Orthant Protocol
- By using Gaussian random variables, we find out
that the correlation function is given by certain
areas on the sphere in k1 dimensions - For k1 we get arcs on
- the circle area angle
k1
k2
- For k2 we get spherical
- triangles
- area ?1?2?3-?
- For k3, we get spherical
- tetrahedra
16Resulting Correlation Function
k3
k2
k1
Strong enough! Requires only 2 bits of
communication!!
17(No Transcript)
18Getting the Right Correlations
19The Idea
20Idea - Continued
- Our goal is, therefore, to find a transformation
C on vectors such that for all a,b?Rn, - ?C(a),C(b)?h-1(?a,b?)
- Assume, for example, that h-1(x)x3
- Then we can choose C to be the mapping
- v ? v?v?v
- and then for any vectors a,b,
- ?C(a),C(b)??a?a?a,b?b?b??a,b?3h-1(?a,b?)
- as required.
-
21Extending this Idea
- Now assume that h-1(x)(x3x)/2
- We can choose C to be the mapping
- v ? (v?v?v ? v)/?2
- and this gives
- ?C(a),C(b)? ½?a?a?a ? a , b?b?b ? b?
- ½?a,b?3 ½?a,b?
- h-1(?a,b?)
- as required.
22Extending this Idea
- In general, we can find a mapping C as long as
the power series expansion of h-1 has only
nonnegative coefficients - In order to apply this idea to the 2-bit
orthant protocol, we simply have to analyze
the power series of the inverse of - We omit the details
23Open Questions
- Is there any 1-bit protocol?
- We conjecture that there isnt any
- Extend to the more general problem of simulating
local measurements on quantum states