TY - JOUR
T1 - Ultimate Data Hiding in Quantum Mechanics and Beyond
AU - Lami, Ludovico
AU - Palazuelos, Carlos
AU - Winter, Andreas
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2018, Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.
PY - 2018/7/1
Y1 - 2018/7/1
N2 - The phenomenon of data hiding, i.e. the existence of pairs of states of a bipartite system that are perfectly distinguishable via general entangled measurements yet almost indistinguishable under LOCC, is a distinctive signature of nonclassicality. The relevant figure of merit is the maximal ratio (called data hiding ratio) between the distinguishability norms associated with the two sets of measurements we are comparing, typically all measurements vs LOCC protocols. For a bipartite n× n quantum system, it is known that the data hiding ratio scales as n, i.e. the square root of the real dimension of the local state space of density matrices. We show that for bipartite nA× nB systems the maximum data hiding ratio against LOCC protocols is Θ (min { nA, nB}). This scaling is better than the previously obtained upper bounds O(nAnB) and min{nA2,nB2}, and moreover our intuitive argument yields constants close to optimal. In this paper, we investigate data hiding in the more general context of general probabilistic theories (GPTs), an axiomatic framework for physical theories encompassing only the most basic requirements about the predictive power of the theory. The main result of the paper is the determination of the maximal data hiding ratio obtainable in an arbitrary GPT, which is shown to scale linearly in the minimum of the local dimensions. We exhibit an explicit model achieving this bound up to additive constants, finding that quantum mechanical data hiding ratio is only of the order of the square root of the maximal one. Our proof rests crucially on an unexpected link between data hiding and the theory of projective and injective tensor products of Banach spaces. Finally, we develop a body of techniques to compute data hiding ratios for a variety of restricted classes of GPTs that support further symmetries.
AB - The phenomenon of data hiding, i.e. the existence of pairs of states of a bipartite system that are perfectly distinguishable via general entangled measurements yet almost indistinguishable under LOCC, is a distinctive signature of nonclassicality. The relevant figure of merit is the maximal ratio (called data hiding ratio) between the distinguishability norms associated with the two sets of measurements we are comparing, typically all measurements vs LOCC protocols. For a bipartite n× n quantum system, it is known that the data hiding ratio scales as n, i.e. the square root of the real dimension of the local state space of density matrices. We show that for bipartite nA× nB systems the maximum data hiding ratio against LOCC protocols is Θ (min { nA, nB}). This scaling is better than the previously obtained upper bounds O(nAnB) and min{nA2,nB2}, and moreover our intuitive argument yields constants close to optimal. In this paper, we investigate data hiding in the more general context of general probabilistic theories (GPTs), an axiomatic framework for physical theories encompassing only the most basic requirements about the predictive power of the theory. The main result of the paper is the determination of the maximal data hiding ratio obtainable in an arbitrary GPT, which is shown to scale linearly in the minimum of the local dimensions. We exhibit an explicit model achieving this bound up to additive constants, finding that quantum mechanical data hiding ratio is only of the order of the square root of the maximal one. Our proof rests crucially on an unexpected link between data hiding and the theory of projective and injective tensor products of Banach spaces. Finally, we develop a body of techniques to compute data hiding ratios for a variety of restricted classes of GPTs that support further symmetries.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85048376848&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s00220-018-3154-4
DO - 10.1007/s00220-018-3154-4
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85048376848
SN - 0010-3616
VL - 361
SP - 661
EP - 708
JO - Communications in Mathematical Physics
JF - Communications in Mathematical Physics
IS - 2
ER -