We investigate the entanglement of bipartite systems from an operational point of view.
Main emphasis is put on bipartite pure states in the single copy regime. First, we present
an operational characterization of bipartite pure state entanglement, viewing the state
as a multipartite state. Then, we investigate the properties and relations of two classes
of operational bipartite and multipartite entanglement measures, the so-called source
and the accessible entanglement. The former measures how easy it is to generate a
given state via local operations and classical communication (LOCC) from some other
state, whereas the latter measures the potentiality of a state to be convertible to other
states via LOCC. We investigate which parameter regime is physically available, i.e. for
which values of these measures does there exist a bipartite pure state. Moreover, we
determine, given some state, which parameter regime can be accessed by it and from
which parameter regime it can be accessed. We show that this regime can be determined
analytically using the Positivstellensatz. We compute the boundaries of these sets and
the boundaries of the corresponding source and accessible sets. Furthermore, we relate
these results to other entanglement measures and compare their behaviors.
«
We investigate the entanglement of bipartite systems from an operational point of view.
Main emphasis is put on bipartite pure states in the single copy regime. First, we present
an operational characterization of bipartite pure state entanglement, viewing the state
as a multipartite state. Then, we investigate the properties and relations of two classes
of operational bipartite and multipartite entanglement measures, the so-called source
and the accessible entanglement. The former measures...
»