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      Multi-party zero-error classical channel coding with entanglement

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          Abstract

          We study the effects of quantum entanglement on the performance of two classical zero-error communication tasks among multiple parties. Both tasks are generalizations of the two-party zero-error channel-coding problem, where a sender and a receiver want to perfectly communicate messages through a one-way classical noisy channel. If the two parties are allowed to share entanglement, there are several positive results that show the existence of channels for which they can communicate strictly more than what they could do with classical resources. In the first task, one sender wants to communicate a common message to multiple receivers. We show that if the number of receivers is greater than a certain threshold then entanglement does not allow for an improvement in the communication for any finite number of uses of the channel. On the other hand, when the number of receivers is fixed, we exhibit a class of channels for which entanglement gives an advantage. The second problem we consider features multiple collaborating senders and one receiver. Classically, cooperation among the senders might allow them to communicate on average more messages than the sum of their individual possibilities. We show that whenever a channel allows single-sender entanglement-assisted advantage, then the gain extends also to the multi-sender case. Furthermore, we show that entanglement allows for a peculiar amplification of information which cannot happen classically, for a fixed number of uses of a channel with multiple senders.

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          On the Shannon capacity of a graph

          L Lovász (1979)
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            General properties of Nonsignaling Theories

            , , (2005)
            This article identifies a series of properties common to all theories that do not allow for superluminal signaling and predict the violation of Bell inequalities. Intrinsic randomness, uncertainty due to the incompatibility of two observables, monogamy of correlations, impossibility of perfect cloning, privacy of correlations, bounds in the shareability of some states; all these phenomena are solely a consequence of the no-signaling principle and nonlocality. In particular, it is shown that for any distribution, the properties of (i) nonlocal, (ii) no arbitrarily shareable and (iii) positive secrecy content are equivalent.
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              Zero-error information theory

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                2014-03-19
                2014-09-19
                Article
                10.1109/TIT.2014.2379273
                1403.5003
                504b2854-c115-48fb-8cd8-ee503f98a738

                http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

                History
                Custom metadata
                IEEE Transactions on Information Theory, vol 61, no 2, pp 1113-1123, 2015
                Some proofs have been modified
                quant-ph

                Quantum physics & Field theory
                Quantum physics & Field theory

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