Steering, entanglement, nonlocality, and the Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen paradox

From MaRDI portal
Publication:3107789

DOI10.1103/PHYSREVLETT.98.140402zbMATH Open1228.81078arXivquant-ph/0612147OpenAlexW2068343535WikidataQ57318375 ScholiaQ57318375MaRDI QIDQ3107789FDOQ3107789


Authors: H. M. Wiseman, S. J. Jones, Andrew C. Doherty Edit this on Wikidata


Publication date: 26 December 2011

Published in: Physical Review Letters (Search for Journal in Brave)

Abstract: The concept of steering was introduced by Schrodinger in 1935 as a generalization of the EPR paradox for arbitrary pure bipartite entangled states and arbitrary measurements by one party. Until now, it has never been rigorously defined, so it has not been known (for example) what mixed states are steerable (that is, can be used to exhibit steering). We provide an operational definition, from which we prove (by considering Werner states and Isotropic states) that steerable states are a strict subset of the entangled states, and a strict superset of the states that can exhibit Bell-nonlocality. For arbitrary bipartite Gaussian states we derive a linear matrix inequality that decides the question of steerability via Gaussian measurements, and we relate this to the original EPR paradox.


Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/quant-ph/0612147




Recommendations



Cites Work


Cited In (only showing first 100 items - show all)





This page was built for publication: Steering, entanglement, nonlocality, and the Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen paradox

Report a bug (only for logged in users!)Click here to report a bug for this page (MaRDI item Q3107789)