Statistical mixtures of states can be more quantum than their superpositions: Comparison of nonclassicality measures for single-qubit states
Adam Miranowicz, Karol Bartkiewicz, Anirban Pathak, Jan Perina Jr.,, Yueh-Nan Chen, Franco Nori

TL;DR
This paper compares various measures of nonclassicality for single-qubit states, revealing how different states rank differently depending on the measure used and establishing relationships between these measures.
Contribution
It provides a detailed comparison of four nonclassicality measures for single-qubit states, highlighting their differences and relationships, especially between mixtures and pure states.
Findings
Mixed states can be more nonclassical than pure states depending on the measure.
Concurrence potential equals the nonclassical distance for single-qubit states.
Different measures can rank the nonclassicality of states differently.
Abstract
A bosonic state is commonly considered nonclassical (or quantum) if its Glauber-Sudarshan function is not a classical probability density, which implies that only coherent states and their statistical mixtures are classical. We quantify the nonclassicality of a single qubit, defined by the vacuum and single-photon states, by applying the following four well-known measures of nonclassicality: (1) the nonclassical depth, , related to the minimal amount of Gaussian noise which changes a nonpositive function into a positive one; (2) the nonclassical distance , defined as the Bures distance of a given state to the closest classical state, which is the vacuum for the single-qubit Hilbert space; together with (3) the negativity potential (NP) and (4) concurrence potential, which are the nonclassicality measures corresponding to the entanglement measures (i.e., the negativity…
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