Four qubits can be entangled in nine different ways
Top Cited Papers
- 25 April 2002
- journal article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review A
- Vol. 65 (5)
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physreva.65.052112
Abstract
We consider a single copy of a pure four-partite state of qubits and investigate its behaviour under the action of stochastic local quantum operations assisted by classical communication (SLOCC). This leads to a complete classification of all different classes of pure states of four-qubits. It is shown that there exist nine families of states corresponding to nine different ways of entangling four qubits. The states in the generic family give rise to GHZ-like entanglement. The other ones contain essentially 2- or 3-qubit entanglement distributed among the four parties. The concept of concurrence and 3-tangle is generalized to the case of mixed states of 4 qubits, giving rise to a seven parameter family of entanglement monotones. Finally, the SLOCC operations maximizing all these entanglement monotones are derived, yielding the optimal single copy distillation protocolKeywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Lorentz singular-value decomposition and its applications to pure states of three qubitsPhysical Review A, 2002
- Stimulated emission of polarization-entangled photonsNature, 2001
- Four-photon entanglement from down-conversionPhysical Review A, 2001
- Experimental Demonstration of Four-Photon Entanglement and High-Fidelity TeleportationPhysical Review Letters, 2001
- Exact and asymptotic measures of multipartite pure-state entanglementPhysical Review A, 2000
- Optimal Distillation of a Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger StatePhysical Review Letters, 2000
- Three qubits can be entangled in two inequivalent waysPhysical Review A, 2000
- Distributed entanglementPhysical Review A, 2000
- Bell inequality, Bell states and maximally entangled states for n qubitsPhysics Letters A, 1998
- Entanglement of Formation of an Arbitrary State of Two QubitsPhysical Review Letters, 1998