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Published March 2017 | Submitted
Journal Article Open

Converse Bounds for Private Communication Over Quantum Channels

Abstract

This paper establishes several converse bounds on the private transmission capabilities of a quantum channel. The main conceptual development builds firmly on the notion of a private state, which is a powerful, uniquely quantum method for simplifying the tripartite picture of privacy involving local operations and public classical communication to a bipartite picture of quantum privacy involving local operations and classical communication. This approach has previously led to some of the strongest upper bounds on secret key rates, including the squashed entanglement and the relative entropy of entanglement. Here, we use this approach along with a "privacy test" to establish a general meta-converse bound for private communication, which has a number of applications. The meta-converse allows for proving that any quantum channel's relative entropy of entanglement is a strong converse rate for private communication. For covariant channels, the meta-converse also leads to second-order expansions of relative entropy of entanglement bounds for private communication rates. For such channels, the bounds also apply to the private communication setting in which the sender and the receiver are assisted by unlimited public classical communication, and as such, they are relevant for establishing various converse bounds for quantum key distribution protocols conducted over these channels. We find precise characterizations for several channels of interest and apply the methods to establish converse bounds on the private transmission capabilities of all phase-insensitive bosonic channels.

Additional Information

© 2017 IEEE. Manuscript received September 7, 2016; accepted December 26, 2016. Date of publication January 5, 2017; date of current version February 14, 2017. This work was supported by the ARO grant for Research on Quantum Algorithms at the IQIM under Grant W911NF-12-1-0521. M. M. Wilde was supported in part by the NSF under Award CCF-1350397 and in part by the Office of Naval Research. M. Tomamichel was supported in part by the University of Sydney Postdoctoral Fellowship and in part by the ARC Centre of Excellence for Engineered Quantum Systems. M. Berta was supported in part by the Institute for Quantum Information and Matter, in part by the NSF Physics Frontiers Center NFS under Grant PHY-1125565, and in part by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation under Grant GBMF-12500028. The authors are grateful to Siddhartha Das, Nilanjana Datta, Eleni Diamanti, Kenneth Goodenough, Michal Horodecki, Felix Leditzky, Will Matthews, Alexander Müller-Hermes, Yan Pautrat, Stefano Pirandola, Joe Renes, David Sutter, Masahiro Takeoka, and Stephanie Wehner for helpful discussions. Marco Tomamichel and Mario Berta thank the Hearne Institute for Theoretical Physics at Louisiana State University for hosting them for a research visit in March 2016.

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August 19, 2023
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October 24, 2023