Entangling Power and Its Deviation: A Quantitative Analysis on Input-State Dependence and Variability in Entanglement Generation
Kyoungho Cho, Jeongho Bang

TL;DR
This paper introduces the entangling power deviation (EPD) as a new metric alongside entangling power (EP) to better characterize the input-state dependence and variability in quantum entanglement generation, supported by a group-theoretical framework.
Contribution
It develops a general framework to compute EP and EPD, revealing the importance of EPD in understanding the nuanced behavior of quantum gates beyond traditional measures.
Findings
EP and EPD are both necessary for complete characterization of entangling behavior.
Different quantum gates can have identical EP but different EPD, indicating diverse entanglement dynamics.
Dimension-parity affects entanglement generation, detectable by EPD but not EP.
Abstract
Quantifying the entangling capability of quantum operations is a fundamental task in quantum information science. Traditionally, this capability is measured by the entangling power (EP), defined as the average entanglement generated when a quantum operation acts uniformly on all possible product states. However, EP alone cannot capture the intricate input-state-dependent nature of entanglement generation. To address this, we define a complementary metric -- entangling power deviation (EPD) -- as the standard deviation of entanglement generated over all product input states, thereby capturing the multifaceted nature of entangling behavior. We develop a general group-theoretical framework that yields closed-form expressions for both EP and EPD. Our analysis shows that any nontrivial entangling operation necessarily exhibits input-state dependence: nonzero EP implies a nonzero EPD. By…
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