Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen steering incarnates a useful nonclassical correlation which sits between entanglement and Bell nonlocality. While a number of qualitative steering criteria exist, very little has been achieved for what concerns quantifying steerability. We introduce a computable measure of steering for arbitrary bipartite Gaussian states of continuous variable systems. For two-mode Gaussian states, the measure reduces to a form of coherent information, which is proven never to exceed entanglement, and to reduce to it on pure states. We provide an operational connection between our measure and the key rate in one-sided device-independent quantum key distribution. We further prove that Peres' conjecture holds in its stronger form within the fully Gaussian regime: namely, steering bound entangled Gaussian states by Gaussian measurements is impossible. Steering is the quantum mechanical phenomenon that allows one party, Alice, to change (i.e., to "steer") the state of a distant party, Bob, by exploiting their shared entanglement. This phenomenon, fascinatingly discussed by Schrödinger [8,9], was already noted by Einstein, Podolksy, and Rosen (EPR) in their famous 1935 paper [12], and is at the heart of the so-called EPR paradox [13]. There it was argued that steering implied an unacceptable "action at a distance," which led EPR to claim the incompleteness of quantum theory. The EPR expectations for local realism were mostly extinguished by Bell's theorems [14,15], which showed that no locally causal theory can reproduce all the correlations observed in nature [16]. The first experimental criterion for the demonstration of the EPR paradox, i.e., for the detection of quantum steering, was later proposed by Reid [17], but it was not until 2007 that the particular type of nonlocality captured by the concept of steering [8,9,12] was in fact formalized [10,18].From a quantum information perspective [10], steering corresponds to the task of verifiable entanglement distribution by an untrusted party. If Alice and Bob share a state which is steerable in one way, say from Alice to Bob, then Alice is able to convince Bob (who does not trust Alice) that their shared state is entangled, by performing local measurements and classical communication [10]. Notice that steering, unlike entanglement, is an asymmetric property: a quantum state may be steerable from Alice to Bob, but not vice versa. On the operational side, it has been recently realized that steering provides security in one-sided device-independent quantum key distribution (QKD) [19], where the measurement apparatus of one party only is untrusted. These protocols are less demanding than totally device-independent ones, for which Bell nonlocality is known to be necessary [3]. Experimentally, at variance with the case of Bell tests, a demonstration of steering free of detection and locality loopholes is in reach [19][20][21][22], which makes one-sided device-independent QKD appealing for current technology and quantum steering a practically useful concept. EPR ste...
Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen steering is a manifestation of quantum correlations exhibited by quantum systems that allows for entanglement certification when one of the subsystems is not characterized. Detecting the steerability of quantum states is essential to assess their suitability for quantum information protocols with partially trusted devices. We provide a hierarchy of sufficient conditions for the steerability of bipartite quantum states of any dimension, including continuous variable states. Previously known steering criteria are recovered as special cases of our approach. The proposed method allows us to derive optimal steering witnesses for arbitrary families of quantum states and provides a systematic framework to analytically derive nonlinear steering criteria. We discuss relevant examples and, in particular, provide an optimal steering witness for a lossy single-photon Bell state; the witness can be implemented just by linear optics and homodyne detection and detects steering with a higher loss tolerance than any other known method. Our approach is readily applicable to multipartite steering detection and to the characterization of joint measurability.
We derive laws for the distribution of quantum steering among different parties in multipartite Gaussian states under Gaussian measurements. We prove that a monogamy relation akin to the generalized Coffman-Kundu-Wootters inequality holds quantitatively for a recently introduced measure of Gaussian steering. We then define the residual Gaussian steering, stemming from the monogamy inequality, as an indicator of collective steeringtype correlations. For pure three-mode Gaussian states, the residual acts a quantifier of genuine multipartite steering, and is interpreted operationally in terms of the guaranteed key rate in the task of secure quantum secret sharing. Optimal resource states for the latter protocol are identified, and their possible experimental implementation discussed. Our results pin down the role of multipartite steering for quantum communication.arXiv:1603.08173v2 [quant-ph]
The need for secrecy and security is essential in communication. Secret sharing is a conventional protocol to distribute a secret message to a group of parties, who cannot access it individually but need to cooperate in order to decode it. While several variants of this protocol have been investigated, including realizations using quantum systems, the security of quantum secret sharing schemes still remains unproven almost two decades after their original conception. Here we establish an unconditional security proof for continuous variable entanglementbased quantum secret sharing schemes, in the limit of asymptotic keys and for an arbitrary number of players. We tackle the problem by resorting to the recently developed one-sided device-independent approach to quantum key distribution. We demonstrate theoretically the feasibility of our scheme, which can be implemented by Gaussian states and homodyne measurements, with no need for ideal single-photon sources or quantum memories. Our results contribute to validating quantum secret sharing as a viable primitive for quantum technologies.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2025 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.