Geometric picture for SLOCC classification of pure permutation symmetric three-qubit states
K. Anjali, I.Reena, Sudha, B. G. Divyamani, H. S. Karthik, K. S., Mallesh, A. R. Usha Devi

TL;DR
This paper uses geometric visualization via steering ellipsoids to classify pure permutation symmetric three-qubit states under SLOCC, revealing distinct geometric signatures and exploring monogamy relations.
Contribution
It introduces a geometric approach to distinguish SLOCC classes of symmetric three-qubit states using steering ellipsoids and analyzes their monogamy relations.
Findings
Pure symmetric states with three distinct spinors produce prolate spheroids.
States from symmetrization of two spinors produce oblate spheroids.
Steering ellipsoid volumes relate to monogamy of quantum correlations.
Abstract
The quantum steering ellipsoid inscribed inside the Bloch sphere offers an elegant geometric visualization of two-qubit states shared between Alice and Bob. The set of Bloch vectors of Bob's qubit, steered by Alice via all possible local measurements on her qubit, constitutes the steering ellipsoid. The steering ellipsoids are shown to be effective in capturing quantum correlation properties, such as monogamy, exhibited by entangled multiqubit systems. We focus here on the canonical ellipsoids of two-qubit states realized by incorporating optimal local filtering operations by Alice and Bob on their respective qubits. Based on these canonical forms we show that the reduced two-qubit states drawn from pure entangled three-qubit permutation symmetric states, which are inequivalent under stochastic local operations and classcial communication (SLOCC), carry distinct geometric signatures. We…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Information and Cryptography · Blind Source Separation Techniques · Quantum Mechanics and Applications
