Information causality as a physical principle

被引:449
作者
Pawlowski, Marcin [1 ]
Paterek, Tomasz [2 ,3 ]
Kaszlikowski, Dagomir [2 ,3 ]
Scarani, Valerio [2 ,3 ]
Winter, Andreas [2 ,3 ,4 ]
Zukowski, Marek [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Gdansk, Inst Theoret Phys & Astrophys, PL-80952 Gdansk, Poland
[2] Natl Univ Singapore, Ctr Quantum Technol, Singapore 117543, Singapore
[3] Natl Univ Singapore, Dept Phys, Singapore 117543, Singapore
[4] Univ Bristol, Dept Math, Bristol BS8 1TW, Avon, England
基金
英国工程与自然科学研究理事会; 新加坡国家研究基金会;
关键词
QUANTUM; COMMUNICATION;
D O I
10.1038/nature08400
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Quantum physics has remarkable distinguishing characteristics. For example, it gives only probabilistic predictions (non-determinism) and does not allow copying of unknown states (no-cloning(1)). Quantum correlations may be stronger than any classical ones(2), but information cannot be transmitted faster than light (no-signalling). However, these features do not uniquely define quantum physics. A broad class of theories exist that share such traits and allow even stronger (than quantum) correlations(3). Here we introduce the principle of 'information causality' and show that it is respected by classical and quantum physics but violated by all no-signalling theories with stronger than (the strongest) quantum correlations. The principle relates to the amount of information that an observer ( Bob) can gain about a data set belonging to another observer (Alice), the contents of which are completely unknown to him. Using all his local resources (which may be correlated with her resources) and allowing classical communication from her, the amount of information that Bob can recover is bounded by the information volume (m) of the communication. Namely, if Alice communicates m bits to Bob, the total information obtainable by Bob cannot be greater than m. For m = 0, information causality reduces to the standard no-signalling principle. However, no-signalling theories with maximally strong correlations would allow Bob access to all the data in any m-bit subset of the whole data set held by Alice. If only one bit is sent by Alice (m = 1), this is tantamount to Bob's being able to access the value of any single bit of Alice's data (but not all of them). Information causality may therefore help to distinguish physical theories from non-physical ones. We suggest that information causality-a generalization of the no-signalling condition-might be one of the foundational properties of nature.
引用
收藏
页码:1101 / 1104
页数:4
相关论文
共 30 条
  • [1] From Bell's theorem to secure quantum key distribution
    Acin, Antonio
    Gisin, Nicolas
    Masanes, Lluis
    [J]. PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS, 2006, 97 (12)
  • [2] Dense quantum coding and quantum finite automata
    Ambainis, A
    Nayak, A
    Ta-Shma, A
    Vazirani, U
    [J]. JOURNAL OF THE ACM, 2002, 49 (04) : 496 - 511
  • [3] Barnum H., 2008, TELEPORTATION GEN PR
  • [4] Generalized no-broadcasting theorem
    Barnum, Howard
    Barrett, Jonathan
    Leifer, Matthew
    Wilce, Alexander
    [J]. PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS, 2007, 99 (24)
  • [5] No signaling and quantum key distribution
    Barrett, J
    Hardy, L
    Kent, A
    [J]. PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS, 2005, 95 (01)
  • [6] Information processing in generalized probabilistic theories
    Barrett, Jonathan
    [J]. PHYSICAL REVIEW A, 2007, 75 (03):
  • [7] Bell J.S., 1964, PHYSICS, V1, P195, DOI [10.1103/Physics-PhysiqueFizika.1.195, DOI 10.1103/PHYSICSPHYSIQUEFIZIKA.1.195, 10.1103/PhysicsPhysiqueFizika.1.195]
  • [8] Bennett C.H., 1984, P IEEE INT C COMP SY, V175, DOI DOI 10.1016/J.TCS.2014.05.025
  • [9] COMMUNICATION VIA ONE-PARTICLE AND 2-PARTICLE OPERATORS ON EINSTEIN-PODOLSKY-ROSEN STATES
    BENNETT, CH
    WIESNER, SJ
    [J]. PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS, 1992, 69 (20) : 2881 - 2884
  • [10] TELEPORTING AN UNKNOWN QUANTUM STATE VIA DUAL CLASSICAL AND EINSTEIN-PODOLSKY-ROSEN CHANNELS
    BENNETT, CH
    BRASSARD, G
    CREPEAU, C
    JOZSA, R
    PERES, A
    WOOTTERS, WK
    [J]. PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS, 1993, 70 (13) : 1895 - 1899