Local equivalence of stabilizer states: a graphical characterisation
Nathan Claudet, Simon Perdrix

TL;DR
This paper introduces a generalized local complementation method that fully characterizes LU-equivalence among stabilizer states represented by graphs, revealing an infinite hierarchy of equivalence classes.
Contribution
It extends local complementation to a broader class of transformations, providing a complete graphical criterion for LU-equivalence of graph states.
Findings
Identifies a strict hierarchy of graph state equivalences.
Develops a standard form for LU-equivalence using vertex typing.
Shows the limitations of local complementation alone.
Abstract
Stabilizer states form a ubiquitous family of quantum states that can be graphically represented through the graph state formalism. A fundamental property of graph states is that applying a local complementation - a well-known and extensively studied graph transformation - results in a graph that represents the same entanglement as the original. In other words, the corresponding graph states are LU-equivalent. This property served as the cornerstone for capturing non-trivial quantum properties in a simple graphical manner, in the study of quantum entanglement but also for developing protocols and models based on graph states and stabilizer states, such as measurement-based quantum computing, secret sharing, error correction, entanglement distribution... However, local complementation fails short to fully characterise entanglement: there exist pairs of graph states that are LU-equivalent…
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