Two-qubit correlations revisited: average mutual information, relevant (and useful) observables and an application to remote state preparation
Paolo Giorda, Michele Allegra

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new measure of two-qubit correlations based on mutual information, classifies states by symmetry, and develops a protocol-specific approach to optimize remote state preparation efficiency.
Contribution
It presents a general correlation measure, a classification scheme for states, and a protocol-tailored method to identify relevant correlations for quantum communication.
Findings
Correlation symmetry influences protocol efficiency.
Optimized protocols outperform standard ones for certain states.
Purity and correlation symmetry are key resources in communication.
Abstract
Understanding how correlations can be used for quantum communication protocols is a central goal of quantum information science. While many authors have linked global measures of correlations such as entanglement or discord to the performance of specific protocols, in general the latter may require only correlations between specific observables. In this work, we first introduce a general measure of correlations for two-qubit states based on the classical mutual information between local observables. We then discuss the role of the symmetry in the state's correlations distribution and accordingly provide a classification of maximally mixed marginals states (MMMS). We discuss the complementarity relation between correlations and coherence. By focusing on a simple yet paradigmatic example, i.e., the remote state preparation protocol, we introduce a method to systematically define proper…
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