Universal Limits on Quantum Correlations
Samuel Alperin

TL;DR
This paper reveals a unified geometric framework based on a positivity invariant that bounds quantum correlations, unifying limits like the Lieb-Robinson and Heisenberg bounds and deriving new universal constraints.
Contribution
It introduces a positivity invariant of the correlation matrix that unifies various quantum correlation bounds and derives new universal limits in quantum systems.
Findings
Identifies a positivity invariant $hi$ that measures a state's distance from the quantum state space boundary.
Derives a $hi$-dependent inequality that bounds correlation measures universally.
Produces exact entanglement floors and universal Fisher-information ceilings in quantum networks.
Abstract
Quantum correlations are the singular, defining resource of quantum information science and metrology, forming the basis of every operational advantage that quantum systems hold over classical ones. Yet exact bounds on these correlations-such as the Lieb-Robinson bound on entanglement propagation and the Heisenberg limit on metrological precision-are known only in special cases and have long appeared to arise from unrelated mechanisms. Here we show that these limits share a common geometric origin. We identify a positivity invariant of the block correlation matrix, denoted , that quantifies how far a bipartite state lies from the positivity boundary of quantum state space. For any system with a specified observable algebra and parameter-encoding map, every correlation measure determined solely by the positive correlation matrix obeys a -dependent inequality. For systems with…
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