Measurement uncertainty relations for discrete observables: Relative entropy formulation
Alberto Barchielli, Matteo Gregoratti, Alessandro Toigo

TL;DR
This paper develops an information-theoretic framework for quantum measurement uncertainty relations using relative entropy, providing a new measure of incompatibility and analyzing optimal joint measurements for discrete observables.
Contribution
It introduces a novel entropic divergence-based uncertainty measure, characterizes its properties, and evaluates it for specific quantum systems, extending to multiple observables.
Findings
The entropic divergence quantifies the total information loss in approximate joint measurements.
The measure vanishes if and only if the observables are compatible.
Explicit calculations are provided for spin-1/2 components and mutually unbiased bases.
Abstract
We introduce a new information-theoretic formulation of quantum measurement uncertainty relations, based on the notion of relative entropy between measurement probabilities. In the case of a finite-dimensional system and for any approximate joint measurement of two target discrete observables, we define the entropic divergence as the maximal total loss of information occurring in the approximation at hand. For fixed target observables, we study the joint measurements minimizing the entropic divergence, and we prove the general properties of its minimum value. Such a minimum is our uncertainty lower bound: the total information lost by replacing the target observables with their optimal approximations, evaluated at the worst possible state. The bound turns out to be also an entropic incompatibility degree, that is, a good information-theoretic measure of incompatibility: indeed, it…
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