No quantum advantage without classical communication: fundamental limitations of quantum networks

日程

Abstract

Quantum networks connect systems at separate locations via quantum links, enabling a wide range of quantum information tasks between distant parties. Large-scale networks have the potential to enable global secure communication, distributed quantum computation, enhanced clock synchronization, and high-precision multiparameter metrology. For the optimal development of these technologies, however, it is essential to identify the necessary resources and sub-routines that will lead to the quantum advantage, but this is demanding even for the simplest protocols in quantum information processing. Here we show that quantum networks relying on the long-distance distribution of bipartite entanglement, combined with local operations and shared randomness, cannot achieve a relevant quantum advantage. Specifically, we prove that these networks do not help in preparing resourceful quantum states such as Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger states or cluster states, despite the free availability of long-distance entanglement. At an abstract level, our work points towards a fundamental difference between bipartite and multipartite entanglement. From a practical perspective, our results highlight the need for classical communication combined with quantum memories to fully harness the power of quantum networks.

Personal information

Kiara Hansenne is a postdoctoral researcher in quantum information theory at CEA Paris-Saclay (France). Her research focuses on entanglement theory, quantum networks, and quantum tomography, with a current emphasis on quantum error correction. She completed her PhD with Otfried Gühne at the University of Siegen (Germany) and has collaborated several times with experimentalists.

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發布日期

September 16, 2025

研究中心

量子計算研究所

主題

Quantum Computing