The concept of quantum steering was originally introduced by Schrödinger to describe the "spooky action-at-a-distance" effect noted in the Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen (EPR) paradox, whereby local measurements performed on one party apparently adjust (steer) the state of another distant party. In this talk, I will give an introduction about the advances of the EPR steering and its advantage as quantum resource. Then I will present our efforts on characterizing bipartite and multipartite steering and developing its unique applications in quantum information processing. I will give an overview of our recent developments on quantum steering and its applications in quantum information. I will share our view about the current challenges, opportunities and the future directions for this topic.
Bohr’s complementarity is one central tenet of quantum physics. The paradoxical wave-particle duality of quantum matters and photons has been tested in Young’s double-slit (double-path) interferometers. The object exclusively exhibits wave and particle nature, depending measurement apparatus that can be delayed chosen to rule out too-naive interpretations of quantum complementarity. All experiments to date have been implemented in the double-path framework, while it is of fundamental interests to study complementarity in multipath interferometric systems. Here we demonstrate generalised multipath wave-particle duality in a quantum delayed-choice experiment, implemented by large-scale silicon-integrated multipath interferometers. Single-photon displays sophisticated transitions between wave and particle characters, determined by the choice of quantum-controlled generalised Hadamard operations. We characterise particle-nature by multimode which-path information and wave-nature by multipath coherence of interference, and demonstrate the generalisation of Bohr’s multipath duality relation. Our work provides deep insights into multidimensional quantum physics and benchmarks controllability of integrated photonic quantum technology.
Wigner negativity, as a well-known indicator of nonclassicality, plays an essential role in quantum computing and simulation using continuous-variable systems. Recently, it has been proven that Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen steering is a prerequisite to generate Wigner negativity between two remote modes. Motivated by the demand of real-world quantum network, here we investigate the shareability of generated Wigner negativity in the multipartite scenario from a quantitative perspective. By establishing a monogamy relation akin to the generalized Coffman-Kundu-Wootters inequality, we show that the amount of Wigner negativity cannot be freely distributed among different modes. Moreover, for photon subtraction -- one of the main experimentally realized non-Gaussian operation -- we provide a general method to quantify the remotely generated Wigner negativity. With this method, we find that there is no direct quantitative relation between the Gaussian steerability and the amount of generated Wigner negativity. Our results pave the way for exploiting Wigner negativity as a valuable resource for numerous quantum information protocols based on non-Gaussian scenario.
Entanglement generation between atomic ensembles is typically modeled using the framework of continuous
variables (CV) which approximates discrete spin operators as canonical position and momentum operators.
Although hugely successful with many applications, this approximation is valid only for small deviations in spin.
Here we investigate entanglement generation between two atomic ensemble qubits using a measurement based
scheme of a common light mode. Various methods of entanglement detection of the entangled state is discussed.
We propose a entanglement witness for this state and discuss its further applications to optical states.
We propose criteria and experimental strategies to realise the Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen (EPR) steering nonlocality.
One-way steering can be obtained where there is asymmetry of thermal noise on each system. We also
present EPR steering inequalities that act as signatures and suggest how to optimise EPR correlations in specific
schemes so that the genuine multipartite EPR steering nonlocality (EPR paradox) can also possibly be realised.
The results presented here also apply to the spatially separated macroscopic atomic ensembles.
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