Coherence based on positive operator-valued measures for standard and concatenated quantum state discrimination with inconclusive results
L. F. Melo, O. Jim\'enez, L. Neves

TL;DR
This paper explores how quantum coherence, measured via POVMs, influences the discrimination of symmetric quantum states with inconclusive results, revealing coherence as a fundamental resource beyond quantum correlations.
Contribution
It introduces a coherence-based framework for analyzing fixed-rate inconclusive quantum state discrimination, decomposing coherence into resource components and comparing standard and concatenated strategies.
Findings
POVM coherence decomposes into ancillary coherence and quantum discord.
Concatenated scheme requires more coherence than standard.
Coherence relates to state distinguishability and inconclusive rate.
Abstract
The optimal measurement that discriminates nonorthogonal quantum states with fixed rates of inconclusive outcomes (FRIO) can be decomposed into an assisted separation of the inputs, yielding conclusive and inconclusive outputs, followed by a minimum-error (ME) measurement for the conclusive ones (standard FRIO) or both ones (concatenated FRIO). The implementation of these measurements is underpinned by quantum resources, and here we investigate coherence based on positive operator-valued measures (POVMs) as a resource for both strategies in discriminating equally probable symmetric states of arbitrary dimension. First, we show that the POVM coherence in the assisted separation stage decomposes into the coherence of the ancillary state and the quantum discord between the system and the ancilla, evidencing coherence as a more elementary resource than quantum correlations. Next, it is…
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