State discrimination with postmeasurement information and incompatibility of quantum measurements




Carmeli C, Heinosaari T, Toigo A

PublisherAMER PHYSICAL SOC

2018

Physical Review A

PHYSICAL REVIEW A

PHYS REV A

ARTN 012126

98

1

14

2469-9926

2469-9934

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevA.98.012126



We discuss the following variant of the standard minimum error state discrimination problem: Alice picks the state she sends to Bob among one of several disjoint state ensembles, and she communicates him the chosen ensemble only at a later time. Two different scenarios then arise: either Bob is allowed to arrange his measurement setup after Alice has announced him the chosen ensemble, or he is forced to perform the measurement before Alice's announcement. In the latter case, he can only postprocess his measurement outcome when Alice's extra information becomes available. We compare the optimal guessing probabilities in the two scenarios, and we prove that they are the same if and only if there exist compatible (i.e., jointly measurable) optimal measurements for all of Alice's state ensembles. When this is the case, postprocessing any of the corresponding joint measurements is Bob's optimal strategy in the postmeasurement information scenario. Furthermore, we establish a connection between discrimination with postmeasurement information and the standard state discrimination. By means of this connection and exploiting the presence of symmetries, we are able to compute the various guessing probabilities in many concrete examples.



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 16:17