Strong nonlocality with more imaginarity and less entanglement
Subrata Bera, Indranil Biswas, Atanu Bhunia, Indrani Chattopadhyay, and Debasis Sarkar

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that complex amplitudes in quantum states provide a fundamental advantage in state discrimination, establishing imaginarity as a key resource for quantum cryptography and nonlocality.
Contribution
It constructs the smallest Unextendible Biseparable Basis (UBB) in three qubits, revealing the operational role of imaginarity in quantum nonlocality and cryptography.
Findings
Imaginary components induce strong nonlocality in quantum states.
States with imaginarity are secure against group attacks in cryptography.
The constructed UBB resolves an open problem in quantum basis theory.
Abstract
Complex numbers are central to the formulation of quantum mechanics, yet their role as a genuine resource is only beginning to be understood. In this work, we demonstrate that quantum states with intrinsically complex amplitudes provide a fundamental advantage in state discrimination. We construct a set of five orthogonal three qubit pure states and show that the set is strongly nonlocal if and only if it includes imaginary components. Such a set becomes locally indistinguishable not only under local measurements but also against bipartite joint measurements. This enhanced robustness makes imaginarity a valuable resource for quantum cryptography since information encoded in these states remains secure against collaborative group attacks. Our results highlight a new operational role of complex numbers in quantum theory and establish imaginarity as a key enabler of cryptographic security.…
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