Classical analog of entanglement

Daniel Collins and Sandu Popescu
Phys. Rev. A 65, 032321 – Published 27 February 2002
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Abstract

We show that quantum entanglement has a very close classical analog, namely, secret classical correlations. The fundamental analogy stems from the behavior of quantum entanglement under local operations and classical communication and the behavior of secret correlations under local operations and public communication. A large number of derived analogies follow. In particular, teleportation is analogous to the one time pad, the concept of “pure state” exists in the classical domain, entanglement concentration and dilution are essentially classical secrecy protocols, and single-copy-entanglement manipulations have such a close classical analog that the majorization results are reproduced in the classical setting. This analogy allows one to import questions from the quantum domain into the classical one, and vice versa, helping to get a better understanding of both. Also, by identifying classical aspects of quantum entanglement, it allows one to identify those aspects of entanglement that are uniquely quantum mechanical.

  • Received 3 September 2001

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevA.65.032321

©2002 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

Daniel Collins and Sandu Popescu

  • H.H. Wills Physics Laboratory, University of Bristol, Tyndall Avenue, Bristol BS8 1TL, United Kingdom
  • BRIMS, Hewlett-Packard Laboratories, Stoke Gifford, Bristol BS12 6QZ, United Kingdom

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Issue

Vol. 65, Iss. 3 — March 2002

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