On zero-error communication via quantum channels in the presence of noiseless feedback
Runyao Duan, Simone Severini, Andreas Winter

TL;DR
This paper explores zero-error quantum communication with noiseless feedback, establishing capacity conditions based on non-commutative bipartite graphs and extending classical concepts to quantum channels.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of non-commutative bipartite graphs for quantum channels and characterizes feedback-assisted zero-error capacity, extending classical feedback theory to quantum information.
Findings
Capacity depends only on the linear span of Choi-Kraus operators.
Feedback-assisted capacity is non-zero iff the non-commutative bipartite graph is non-trivial.
Provides an upper bound on feedback-assisted zero-error capacity with desirable properties.
Abstract
We initiate the study of zero-error communication via quantum channels when the receiver and sender have at their disposal a noiseless feedback channel of unlimited quantum capacity, generalizing Shannon's zero-error communication theory with instantaneous feedback. We first show that this capacity is a function only of the linear span of Choi-Kraus operators of the channel, which generalizes the bipartite equivocation graph of a classical channel, and which we dub "non-commutative bipartite graph". Then we go on to show that the feedback-assisted capacity is non-zero (with constant activating noiseless communication) if and only if the non-commutative bipartite graph is non-trivial, and give a number of equivalent characterizations. This result involves a far-reaching extension of the "conclusive exclusion" of quantum states [Pusey/Barrett/Rudolph, Nature Phys. 8:475-478]. We then…
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