Quantifying the performance of bidirectional quantum teleportation
Aliza U. Siddiqui, Mark M. Wilde

TL;DR
This paper develops methods to quantify and evaluate the performance of bidirectional quantum teleportation, establishing bounds, analyzing examples, and proposing optimal schemes, including extensions to controlled teleportation.
Contribution
It introduces equivalent measures for simulation error, provides semi-definite programming bounds, and offers an optimal scheme for bidirectional teleportation, extending to controlled teleportation scenarios.
Findings
Equivalence of diamond distance and channel infidelity in quantifying error
Analytical bounds for isotropic and Werner states
Proposed optimal scheme surpassing existing methods
Abstract
Bidirectional teleportation is a fundamental protocol for exchanging quantum information between two parties by means of a shared resource state and local operations and classical communication (LOCC). Here we develop two seemingly different ways of quantifying the simulation error of unideal bidirectional teleportation by means of the normalized diamond distance and the channel infidelity, and we prove that they are equivalent. By relaxing the set of operations allowed from LOCC to those that completely preserve the positivity of the partial transpose, we obtain semi-definite programming lower bounds on the simulation error of unideal bidirectional teleportation. We evaluate these bounds for several key examples: when there is no resource state at all and for isotropic and Werner states, in each case finding an analytical solution. The first aforementioned example establishes a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Information and Cryptography · Quantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Quantum Mechanics and Applications
