In this work, there are two parties, Alice on Earth and Bob on the satellite, which initially share an entangled state, and some open problems, which emerge during quantum steering that Alice remotely steers Bob, are investigated. Our analytical results indicate that all entangled pure states and maximally entangled evolution states (EESs) are steerable, and not every entangled evolution state is steerable and some steerable states are only locally correlated. Besides, quantum steering from Alice to Bob experiences a “sudden death” with increasing decoherence strength. However, shortly after that, quantum steering experiences a recovery with the increase of decoherence strength in bit flip (BF) and phase flip (PF) channels. Interestingly, while they initially share an entangled pure state, all EESs are steerable and obey Bell nonlocality in PF and phase damping channels. In BF channels, all steerable states can violate Bell-CHSH inequality, but some EESs are unable to be employed to realize steering. However, when they initially share an entangled mixed state, the outcome is different from that of the pure state. Furthermore, the steerability of entangled mixed states is weaker than that of entangled pure states. Thereby, decoherence can induce the degradation of quantum steering, and the steerability of state is associated with the interaction between quantum systems and reservoirs.
The uncertainty principle offers a bound to show accuracy of the simultaneous measurement outcome for two incompatible observables. In this letter, we investigate quantum-memoryassisted entropic uncertainty relation (QMA-EUR) when the particle to be measured stays at an open system, and another particle is treated as quantum memory under a noninertial frame. In such a scenario, the collective influence of the unital and nonunital noise environment, and of the relativistic motion of the system, on the QMA-EUR is examined. By numerical analysis, we conclude that, firstly, the noises and the Unruh effect can both increase the uncertainty, due to the decoherence of the bipartite system induced by the noise or Unruh effect; secondly, the uncertainty is more affected by the noises than by the Unruh effect from the acceleration; thirdly, unital noises can reduce the uncertainty in long-time regime. We give a possible physical interpretation for those results: that the information of interest is redistributed among the bipartite, the noisy environment and the physically inaccessible region in the noninertial frame. Therefore, we claim that our observations provide an insight into dynamics of the entropic uncertainty in a noninertial frame, and might be important to quantum precision measurement under relativistic motion.
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