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When are correlations quantum?—verification and quantification of entanglement by simple measurements

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Published 8 November 2006 Published under licence by IOP Publishing Ltd
, , Citation K M R Audenaert and M B Plenio 2006 New J. Phys. 8 266 DOI 10.1088/1367-2630/8/11/266

1367-2630/8/11/266

Abstract

The verification and quantification of experimentally created entanglement by simple measurements, especially between distant particles, is an important basic task in quantum processing. When composite systems are subjected to local measurements the measurement data will exhibit correlations, whether these systems are classical or quantum. Therefore, the observation of correlations in the classical measurement record does not automatically imply the presence of quantum correlations in the system under investigation. In this study, we explore the question of when correlations, or other measurement data, are sufficient to guarantee the existence of a certain amount of quantum correlations in the system and when additional information, such as the degree of purity of the system, is needed to do so. Various measurement settings are discussed, both numerically and analytically. Exact results and lower bounds on the least entanglement consistent with the observations are presented. The approach is suitable both for the bi-partite and the multi-partite setting.

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10.1088/1367-2630/8/11/266