- Separable states
In
quantum mechanics , separable quantum states are states withoutquantum entanglement .Separable pure states
For simplicity, the following assumes all relevant state spaces are finite dimensional. First, consider separability for
pure state s.Let and be quantum mechanical state spaces, that is, finite dimensional
Hilbert space s with basis states and , respectively. By a postulate of quantum mechanics, the state space of the composite system is given by thetensor product :
with base states , or in more compact notation . From the very definition of the tensor product, any vector of norm 1, i.e. a pure state of the composite system, can be written as :
If a pure state can be written in the form where is a pure state of the i-th subsystem, it is said to be "separable". Otherwise it is called "entangled". Formally, the embedding of a product of states into the product space is given by the
Segre embedding . That is, a quantum-mechanical pure state is separable if and only if it is in the image of the Segre embedding.A standard example of an (un-normalized) entangled state is
:
where "H" is the Hilbert space of dimension 2. We see that when a system is in an entangled pure state, it is not possible to assign states to its subsystems. This will be true, in the appropriate sense, for the mixed state case as well.
The above discussion can be extended to the case of when the state space is infinite dimensional with virtually nothing changed.
eparability for mixed states
Consider the mixed state case. A mixed state of the composite system is described by a
density matrix acting on . ρ is separable if there exist , and which are mixed states of the respective subsystems such that:
where
:
Otherwise is called an entangled state. We can assume without loss of generality in the above expression that and are all rank-1 projections, that is, they represent "pure ensembles" of the appropriate subsystems. It is clear from the definition that the family of separable states is a
convex set .Notice that, again from the definition of the tensor product, any density matrix, indeed any matrix acting on the composite state space, can be trivially written in the desired form, if we drop the requirement that and are themselves states and
In terms of
quantum channel s, a separable state can be created from any other state using local actions and classical communication while an entangled state cannot.When the state spaces are infinite dimensional, density matrices are replaced by positive
trace class operators with trace 1, and a state is separable if it can be approximated, in trace norm, by states of the above form.Extending to the multipartite case
The above discussion generalizes easily to the case of a quantum system consisting of more than two subsystems. Let a system have "n" subsystems and have state space . A pure state is separable if it takes the form
:
Similarly, a mixed state ρ acting on "H" is separable if it is a convex sum
:
Or, in the infinite dimensional case, ρ is separable if it can be approximated in the trace norm by states of the above form.
Separability criterion
The problem of deciding whether a state is separable in general is sometimes called the separability problem in
quantum information theory . It is considered to be a difficult problem. It has been shown to beNP-hard . Some appreciation for this difficulty can be obtained if one attempts to solve the problem by employing the direct brute force approach, for a fixed dimension. We see that the problem quickly becomes intractable, even for low dimensions. Thus more sophisticated formulations are required. The separability problem is a subject of current research.A "separability criterion" is a necessary condition a state must satisfy to be separable. In the low dimensional ("2 X 2" and "2 X 3") cases, the
Peres-Horodecki criterion is actually a necessary and sufficient condition for separability. Other separability criteria include therange criterion andreduction criterion .Characterization via algebraic geometry
Quantum mechanics may be modelled on a
projective Hilbert space , and thecategorical product of two such spaces is theSegre embedding . In the bipartite case, a quantum state is separable if and only if it lies in the image of the Segre embedding.See also
*
Entanglement witness
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