Schrödinger–HJW theorem

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Short description: Concept in quantum information theory

In quantum information theory and quantum optics, the Schrödinger–HJW theorem is a result about the realization of a mixed state of a quantum system as an ensemble of pure quantum states and the relation between the corresponding purifications of the density operators. The theorem is named after physicists and mathematicians Erwin Schrödinger,[1] Lane P. Hughston, Richard Jozsa and William Wootters.[2] The result was also found independently (albeit partially) by Nicolas Gisin,[3] and by Nicolas Hadjisavvas building upon work by Ed Jaynes,[4][5] while a significant part of it was likewise independently discovered by N. David Mermin.[6] Thanks to its complicated history, it is also known by various other names such as the GHJW theorem,[7] the HJW theorem, and the purification theorem.

Purification of a mixed quantum state

Let S be a finite-dimensional complex Hilbert space, and consider a generic (possibly mixed) quantum state ρ defined on S, and admitting a decomposition of the form ρ=ipi|ϕiϕi|,for a collection of (not necessarily mutually orthogonal) states |ϕiS, and coefficients pi0 such that ipi=1. Note that any quantum state can be written in such a way for some {|ϕi}i and {pi}i.[8]

Any such ρ can be purified, that is, represented as the partial trace of a pure state defined in a larger Hilbert space. More precisely, it is always possible to find a (finite-dimensional) Hilbert space A and a pure state |ΨSASA such that ρ=TrA(|ΨSAΨSA|). Furthermore, the states |ΨSA satisfying this are all and only those of the form |ΨSA=ipi|ϕi|ai,for some orthonormal basis {|ai}iA. The state |ΨSA is then referred to as the "purification of ρ". Since the auxiliary space and the basis can be chosen arbitrarily, the purification of a mixed state is not unique; in fact, there are infinitely many purifications of a given mixed state.[9] Because all of them admit a decomposition in the form given above, given any pair of purifications |Ψ,|ΨSA, there is always some unitary operation U:AA such that |Ψ=(IU)|Ψ.

Theorem

Consider a mixed quantum state ρ with two different realizations as ensemble of pure states as ρ=ipi|ϕiϕi| and ρ=jqj|φjφj|. Here both |ϕiand |φj are not assumed to be mutually orthogonal. There will be two corresponding purifications of the mixed state ρ reading as follows:

  • Purification 1: |ΨSA1=ipi|ϕi|ai;
  • Purification 2: |ΨSA2=jqj|φj|bj.

The sets {|ai}and {|bj} are two collections of orthonormal bases of the respective auxiliary spaces. These two purifications only differ by a unitary transformation acting on the auxiliary space, viz., there exists a unitary matrix UAsuch that |ΨSA1=(IUA)|ΨSA2.[10] Therefore, |ΨSA1=jqj|φjUA|bj, which means that we can realize the different ensembles of a mixed state just by making different measurements on the purifying system.

References

  1. Schrödinger, Erwin (1936). "Probability relations between separated systems". Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society 32 (3): 446–452. doi:10.1017/S0305004100019137. Bibcode1936PCPS...32..446S. 
  2. Hughston, Lane P.; Jozsa, Richard; Wootters, William K. (November 1993). "A complete classification of quantum ensembles having a given density matrix". Physics Letters A 183 (1): 14–18. doi:10.1016/0375-9601(93)90880-9. ISSN 0375-9601. Bibcode1993PhLA..183...14H. 
  3. Gisin, N. (1989). “Stochastic quantum dynamics and relativity,” Helvetica Physica Acta 62, 363- 371.
  4. Hadjisavvas, Nicolas (1981). "Properties of mixtures on non-orthogonal states". Letters in Mathematical Physics 5 (4): 327–332. doi:10.1007/BF00401481. Bibcode1981LMaPh...5..327H. 
  5. Jaynes, E. T. (1957). "Information theory and statistical mechanics. II". Physical Review 108 (2): 171–190. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.108.171. Bibcode1957PhRv..108..171J. 
  6. Fuchs, Christopher A. (2011). Coming of Age with Quantum Information: Notes on a Paulian Idea. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-19926-1. OCLC 535491156. 
  7. Mermin, N. David (1999). "What Do These Correlations Know about Reality? Nonlocality and the Absurd". Foundations of Physics 29 (4): 571–587. doi:10.1023/A:1018864225930. Bibcode1998quant.ph..7055M. 
  8. Nielsen, Michael A.; Chuang, Isaac L., "The Schmidt decomposition and purifications", Quantum Computation and Quantum Information (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press): pp. 110–111, https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511976667.006 
  9. Watrous, John (2018). The Theory of Quantum Information. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/9781316848142. ISBN 978-1-107-18056-7. https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/theory-of-quantum-information/AE4AA5638F808D2CFEB070C55431D897. 
  10. Kirkpatrick, K. A. (February 2006). "The Schrödinger-HJW Theorem". Foundations of Physics Letters 19 (1): 95–102. doi:10.1007/s10702-006-1852-1. ISSN 0894-9875. Bibcode2006FoPhL..19...95K.