Published August 8, 2009 | Version Published + Submitted
Journal Article Open

The mother of all protocols: restructuring quantum information's family tree

Abstract

We give a simple, direct proof of the 'mother' protocol of quantum information theory. In this new formulation, it is easy to see that the mother, or rather her generalization to the fully quantum Slepian–Wolf protocol, simultaneously accomplishes two goals: quantum communication-assisted entanglement distillation and state transfer from the sender to the receiver. As a result, in addition to her other 'children', the mother protocol generates the state-merging primitive of Horodecki, Oppenheim and Winter, a fully quantum reverse Shannon theorem, and a new class of distributed compression protocols for correlated quantum sources which are optimal for sources described by separable density operators. Moreover, the mother protocol described here is easily transformed into the so-called 'father' protocol whose children provide the quantum capacity and the entanglement-assisted capacity of a quantum channel, demonstrating that the division of single-sender/single-receiver protocols into two families was unnecessary: all protocols in the family are children of the mother.

Additional Information

© 2009 The Royal Society. Received 16 April 2009. Accepted 1 May 2009. The authors thank Debbie Leung for bringing to their attention the possibility of replacing Haar measure unitaries with random Clifford group elements. They also thank Isaac Chuang, Ignacio Cirac, Frédéric Dupuis, Renato Renner and Jürg Wullschleger for their helpful comments. A.A. appreciates the support of the US National Science Foundation through grant no. EIA-0086038. I.D. was partially supported by the NSF under grant no. CCF-0524811. P.H. was supported by the Canada Research Chairs program, the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, and Canada's NSERC. He is also grateful to the Benasque Centre for Science and CQC Cambridge for their hospitality. A.W. was supported by the UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council's 'IRC QIP', and by the EC projects RESQ (contract IST-2001-37759) and QAP (contract IST-2005-15848), as well as by a University of Bristol Research Fellowship.

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Submitted - 0606225.pdf

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Additional details

Identifiers

Eprint ID
105657
DOI
10.1098/rspa.2009.0202
Resolver ID
CaltechAUTHORS:20200929-143508618

Funding

NSF
EIA-0086038
NSF
CCF-0524811
Canada Research Chairs Program
Canadian Institute for Advanced Research (CIFAR)
Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC)
European Research Council (ERC)
37759
European Research Council (ERC)
15848
University of Bristol

Dates

Created
2020-09-29
Created from EPrint's datestamp field
Updated
2021-11-16
Created from EPrint's last_modified field