December 2007, to be published in Physical Review A


Using measurement-induced disturbance to characterize correlations as classical or quantum
Shunlong Luo

In contrast to the seminal entanglement/separability paradigm widely used in quantum information theory, we introduce a quantum/classical dichotomy in order to classify and quantify statistical correlations in bipartite states. This is based on the idea that while in the classical description of nature, measurements can be carried out without disturbance, in the quantum description, generic measurements often disturb the system and the disturbance can be exploited to quantify quantumness of correlations therein. It turns out that certain separable states still possess correlations of quantum nature, and indicates that quantum correlations are more general than entanglement. The results are illustrated in the Werner states and the isotropic states, and are applied to quantify the quantum advantage of DQC1 model of quantum computation proposed by Knill and Laflamme [Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf 81}, 5672 (1998)].

© 2008 The American Physical Society.