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. 2022 Dec 30;25(1):75. doi: 10.3390/e25010075

Superior Resilience of Non-Gaussian Entanglement against Local Gaussian Noises

Sergey Filippov 1,*, Alena Termanova 2
Editor: Viktor Dodonov
PMCID: PMC9857693  PMID: 36673216

Abstract

Entanglement distribution task encounters a problem of how the initial entangled state should be prepared in order to remain entangled the longest possible time when subjected to local noises. In the realm of continuous-variable states and local Gaussian channels it is tempting to assume that the optimal initial state with the most robust entanglement is Gaussian too; however, this is not the case. Here we prove that specific non-Gaussian two-mode states remain entangled under the effect of deterministic local attenuation or amplification (Gaussian channels with the attenuation factor/power gain κi and the noise parameter μi for modes i=1,2) whenever κ1μ22+κ2μ12<14(κ1+κ2)(1+κ1κ2), which is a strictly larger area of parameters as compared to where Gaussian entanglement is able to tolerate noise. These results shift the “Gaussian world” paradigm in quantum information science (within which solutions to optimization problems involving Gaussian channels are supposed to be attained at Gaussian states).

Keywords: entanglement dynamics, Gaussian channel, attenuator, amplifier, entanglement witness, non-Gaussian state, robust entanglement

1. Introduction

Quantum entanglement is a feature of genuinely quantum correlations that underly many interesting physical phenomena and are a primary resource in quantum information theory enabling advantageous protocols of information processing and transmission [1]. A typical scenario to share this resource among distant parties is to prepare an entangled state in a laboratory and send entangled parts of the state toward the recipients via quantum communication lines [2]. Upon receiving the respective components of the entangled state the recipients can utilize them in entanglement-enabled protocols such as device-independent quantum key distribution [3,4,5] or further convert these entangled degrees of freedom into other degrees of freedom at their disposal, thus creating an entanglement among particles or modes that have never interacted before (entanglement swapping) [6]. The crucial practical challenge in this scenario is that the quantum communication lines are far from being ideal and introduce noise that degrades entanglement. The noise is local because the signals propagate to recipients via different communication lines whose environments do not interact with each other. There are some known techniques on how to locally compensate the negative effect of noise and distill some number of highly entangled states from many poorly entangled ones [7]. However, if the noise destroys entanglement completely so that the recipients actually receive a fully separable quantum state, no local strategy is able to cure this state and make it entangled. Therefore, there exists a fundamental limitation on the noise intensity exceeding which no entanglement can survive—a manifistation of the entanglement annihilation phenomenon [8].

The maximally permissible noise level for entanglement preservation apparently depends on the physical nature of the quantum states sent, the degrees of freedom used, and the nature of the noise that affects those degrees of freedom. In the case of two recipients A and B a local noise is mathematically described by a completely positive trace preserving map Φ1AΦ2B. The quantum channels Φ1 and Φ2 can differ in general as the noises in the communication lines do not have to be identical due to, e.g., a different length or a different physical environment, say, atmosphere [9], optical fiber [10,11], photonic chip [12] or even a quantum memory cell, which can also be considered as a quantum channel. Historically, the first fully studied case of entanglement dynamics is the case of one-sided noise for which Φ1=Id, the identity transformation. In this case the local map IdAΦ2B degrades entanglement of any state if and only if Φ2 has a measure-and-prepare (entanglement-breaking) structure [13,14,15]. For the one-sided noise, the optimal initial state for entanglement preservation is maximally entangled. The case of a two-sided noise Φ1AΦ2B is more complicated to study even for simple systems (such as qubits) and relatively simple noise models (such as T1-T2 qubit decoherence) because the optimal initial state for entanglement preservation is not known a priori. The entanglement annihilation parameters for a local two-qubit depolarizing noise were found in Ref. [16]. Local two-qubit unital noises were studied in Ref. [17] and then generalized with the help of the quantum Sinkhorn theorem to the case of an arbitrary two-qubit local noise Φ1AΦ2B [18]. The case of trace decreasing qubit maps (corresponding to the loss of particles) was analyzed in Ref. [19]. The higher dimensional systems (qudits) were considered in Refs. [20,21,22], with a full characterization of entanglement annihilation parameters being obtained in the case of local qudit-depolarizing noises [22].

The continuous-variable quantum states of electromagnetic radiation (in contrast to discrete-variable polarization states) naturally incorporate the loss of photons within their description and encode quantum information in the field amplitude. The vacuum, coherent, squeezed, and thermal states are typical examples of Gaussian continuous-variable quantum states whose characteristic function is Gaussian [23,24,25]. These states are conventionally sensed by means of the homodyne and heterodyne measurements, which in turn are Gaussian quantum measurements [26]. The losses in quantum communication lines (potentially accompanied by an admixture of extra noise) are described by a quantum attenuator channel Φ(κ,μ), where κ[0,1) is the intensity attenuation factor and μ12(1κ) is the noise parameter precisely defined in terms of characteristic functions in Section 2. Similarly, a deterministic phase-insensitive amplification of optical signal is described by a quantum linear amplifier Φ(κ,μ), where κ(1,) is the power gain and μ12(κ1) is the noise parameter precisely defined in terms of characteristic functions in Section 2. For both channels the minimal noise (μQL12|κ1|) corresponds to the quantum limited operation, the extra noise is a=μμQL. The fact that the noise parameter μ>0 is a consequence of the canonical commutation relation for the photon creation and annihilation operators which is to be respected by the deterministic attenuation and amplification. The channel Φ(1,0) is the ideal channel (identity transformation), whereas Φ(1,μ) describes an addition of classical noise. All the described channels are Gaussian and transform any Gaussian state into another Gaussian state. So does the tensor product ΦA(κ1,μ1)ΦB(κ2,μ2) of Gaussian channels Φ(κ1,μ1) and Φ(κ2,μ2). The one-sided noise ΦA(1,0)ΦB(κ2,μ2) destroys any entanglement between modes A and B (i.e., the channel Φ(κ2,μ2) is entanglement breaking) if μ212(κ2+1). The region of parameters κ1, μ1, κ2, μ2, where the two-sided noise ΦA(κ1,μ1)ΦB(κ2,μ2) annihilates entanglement is not fully characterized yet, and this is a goal of this paper to advance toward better understanding of this general case.

Given the fact that Gaussian states, Gaussian channels, and Gaussian measurements cover many practically relevant scenarios, it is not surprising the subfield of Gaussian quantum information emerged [27]. The subfield is often thought of to be closed in the sense that an optimization problem for a Gaussian channel or a Gaussian measurement should have a solution within the class of Gaussian states or the Gaussian ensembles of Gaussian states. This is true, e.g., with regard to the maximal reliable communication rate through a quantum channel Φ(κ,μ) (for all κ) [28] as well as the maximal communication rate by using a Gaussian homodyne or heterodyne measurement [29,30,31]. Therefore, it is very tempting to conjecture that the most robust entanglement with respect to Gaussian noises is exhibited by a Gaussian state [32] (with the experiments being focused on the Gaussian states too [33,34]). The claim of Ref. [35] is that if one adopts a bona fide measure of entanglement, which is continuous and strongly superadditive, such as the distillable entanglement; then at time t in the Markovian Gaussian evolution eLt (with generator L), the bipartite Gaussian state eLt[ϱ12G(0)] with energy n¯(t) is the most entangled among all possible continuous-variable states eLt[ϱ12(0)] with the same energy, as a simple consequence of the maximum entropy property of Gaussian states [36,37]. We believe this claim of Ref. [35] is incorrect for the following reason. Ref. [36] correctly mentions that if only the covariance matrix of some density operator ϱ1 is known, then there exists a Gaussian density operator ϱ1G with the same covariance matrix (hence, the same energy) such that the entropy of ϱ1G is greater than the entropy of ϱ1. If ϱ1 and ϱ1G are the reduced density operators of pure bipartite states ϱ12 and ϱ12G, then the state ϱ12 is indeed less entangled than the state ϱ12G [37]. However, this line of reasoning cannot be generalized to the evolution states ϱ12G(t) and ϱ12(t) without breaking the equalities ϱ12G(t)=eLt[ϱ12G(0)] and ϱ12(t)=eLt[ϱ12(0)]. In other words, the maximum entropy consideration does not guarantee that the states ϱ12G(t) and ϱ12(t) are obtained from some legitimate states ϱ12G(0) and ϱ12(0) in the same dynamical evolution eLt. In fact, Proposition 1 in Ref. [36] is in accordance with our findings (that we present in this paper) as it states that a continuous and strongly superadditive entanglement measure E satisfies the inequality E(ϱ12G)E(ϱ12) for every density operator ϱ12 with finite covariance matrix and any Gaussian state ϱ12G with the same covariance matrix, i.e., Gaussian states give a lower bound for the entanglement E(ϱ12). Finally, the conjecture on the superior robustness of Gaussian entanglement was shown to be false in 2011 by Sabapathy et al. [38]. They showed that none of two-mode Gaussian states can preserve entanglement under the Gaussian transformation Φ(κ,μ)Φ(κ,μ) if μ12, whereas there exits a non-Gaussian state ϱ12(0) that remains entangled if κ>κ*12 and μ=12. Moreover, for such parameters the preserved entanglement of the output state ϱ12(t) is distillable [i.e., Eϱ12(t)>0 whereas Eϱ12G(t)=0 for any initial Gaussian state ϱ12G(0) with an arbitrary energy] because for the entanglement detection Sabapathy et al. consider an effective two-qubit subspace (spanned by two-mode Fock states |00, |0n, |n0, |nn) and any non-zero two-qubit entanglement is known to be distillable [39].

The result of Sabapathy et al. [38] was further strengthened in Ref. [40], where it was shown that the one-photon non-Gausian state |ψ*AB=12(|01|10) outperforms all Gaussian states (with an arbitrarily high energy) and remains entangled when affected upon by a symmetric noise Φ(κ,μ)Φ(κ,μ) with μ<121+κ2 for all κ. In the case of asymmetric local Gaussian noise ΦA(κ1,μ1)ΦB(κ2,μ2), the question has remained open so far because the state |ψ*AB cannot generally outperform any Gaussian state in terms of entanglement robustness. It is not hard to see with the help of Simon’s criterion [41] that the Gaussian channel ΦA(κ1,μ1)ΦB(κ2,μ2) may preserve a two-mode Gaussian entanglement (i.e., entanglement of some two-mode Gaussian state) if and only if [40]

κ1μ2+κ2μ1<12(κ1+κ2). (1)

The results of Ref. [40] indicate that the state ΦA(κ1,μ1)ΦB(κ2,μ2)[|ψ*ABψ*AB|] can hardly remain entangled for all the parameters satisfying the inequality (1), thereby leaving an open problem on whether Gaussian states may potentially be optimal for entanglement distribution through asymmetric local Gaussian channels. Here we finally resolve this question in negative by demonstrating a channel-dependent non-Gaussian state |ψ˜cκ1,μ1,κ2,μ2AB that outperforms any Gaussian state and remains entangled under the transformation ΦA(κ1,μ1)ΦB(κ2,μ2) whenever

κ1μ22+κ2μ12<14(κ1+κ2)(1+κ1κ2), (2)

which is a strictly larger region than (1). This result explicitly shows that the non-Gaussian entanglement is indeed more resilient to local Gaussian noises as compared to Gaussian states. Non–Gaussian entanglement can be useful not only in the entanglement distribution but also in other tasks, for example, the multi-component cat states were shown to outperform two-mode squeezed vacuum states in phase estimation [42].

The paper is organised as follows. In Section 2, we briefly review the formalism of characteristic functions and describe noisy attenuator and amplifier channels. In Section 3, the entanglement witness used is presented. Section 4 justifies the main result of the paper, the inequality (2), and presents a family of channel-dependent non-Gaussian states |ψ˜cκ1,μ1,κ2,μ2AB. Summary of the results is given in Section 5.

2. Gaussian Attenuation and Amplification Channels

A continuous-variable quantum state can be alternatively described by a density operator ϱ (positive semidefinite operator with unit trace) or any of numerous phase-space functions, for instance, the characteristic function φ(z)=tr[ϱW(z)], where the Weyl operator W(z) for N modes is expressed through the canonical operators qi and pi (satisfying the canonical commutation relation [qi,pj]=iδij) through

W(z)=exp[i(q1x1+p1y1++qNxn+pNyN)], (3)

where (x1,y1,,xN,yN)z are coordinates in the real symplectic space (R2N,Δ) with the symplectic form Δ=i=1N0110. A Gaussian state has a Gaussian characteristic function φ(z)=exp(ilz12zVz), where l=(q1,p1,,qN,pN) is a 2N-dimensional column of the first moments and V is the 2N×2N covariance matrix with elements Vkl=12(RkRlRkRl), Rk,Rl(q1,p1,,qN,pN). This implies that the Gaussian state is fully determined by the first and second moments of the canonical operators.

The Gaussian channel is a completely positive and trace preserving map that maps any Gaussian state into a Gaussian one and acts as follows in terms of input and output characteristic functions φin(z) and φout(z) [26]:

φout(z)=φin(Kz)expimz12zMz, (4)

where the real scaling matrix K and the real noise-quantifying symmetric matrix M must satisfy the inequality Mi2(ΔKΔK) for the map to be completely positive. The full characterization of one-mode Gaussian channels is given in Ref. [43]. We focus on the most important (from the viewpoint of physical applications) deterministic Gaussian channels: phase-insensitive attenuators and amplifiers. These two types of Gaussian channels can be both described within unified formulas: K=κ1001, m=0, M=μ1001, where 0κ<1 for the attenuator, κ>1 for the amplifier, and the noise parameter μ12|1κ|μQL in both cases. We will denote such one-mode Gaussian channels by Φ(κ,μ). The minimal noise μQL corresponds to the quantum-limited operation in which the admixed noise originates from vacuum fluctuations of the environment [44]; however, in some physically relevant systems the noise μ can be much higher that μQL due to a high-temperature environment [45], for instance, in microwave quantum experiments [46,47,48].

The channel Φ(κ,μ) is known to be entanglement-breaking (so that the one-sided noise Φ(1,0)Φ(κ,μ) destroys any two-mode entanglement) if and only if the noise parameter μ exceed the threshold value, μ12(κ+1) [49]. This value is depicted in Figure 1.

Figure 1.

Figure 1

The power attenuation/amplification factor κ and the noise parameter μ for a legitimate one-mode quantum channel Φ(κ,μ). Φ(1,0) is the identity transformation. The channel is entanglement breaking (so that the one-sided noise Φ(1,0)Φ(κ,μ) destroys any two-mode entanglement) above the blue line. Arrows indicate how the parameters κ and μ change in time in the semigroup dynamics.

Clearly, the quantum channel Φ(κ,μ) with fixed parameters κ and μ represents a snapshot of the dynamical map at a particular time moment t, which may correspond to a finite propagation time through a communication line. In a true time evolution the parameters κ and μ become functions of time t, κ(t) and μ(t). For instance, in the semigroup attenuation or amplification dynamics Φ=eLt with the generator L ([50], Section 3.4.6) we obtain the following dependencies:

κ(t)=e±Γt,μ(t)=±e±Γt1n¯+12, (5)

where the sign + (−) describes amplification (attenuation), Γ0 is the process rate, and n¯ is the average number of thermal photons in the environment. For such a semigroup dynamics the one-parameter family of maps Φκ(t),μ(t) is associated with a straight line in the parameter space (κ,μ), see Figure 1.

The diagonal sum representation for the channel Φ(κ,μ) is found in Ref. [51] in terms of the Fock states {|n}n=0 and in Ref. [40] in terms of the coherent states {|α}αC. We use the latter one as it sheds more light on the phase space picture [52,53]. The integral form of the diagonal sum representation reads

Φ(κ,μ)[ϱ]=1π2Aαβ(κ,μ)ϱAαβ(κ,μ)d2αd2β, (6)

where the Kraus operators Aαβ(κ,μ) rather nontrivially depend on parameters κ and μ through auxiliary expressions

τ=max(1,κ)+μ12|κ1|,η=κτ, (7)
Aαβ(κ,μ)=d2γπτexp|α|2+|β|2+|γ|22+1ηαγ+12ττ1β+ηγ2×|τ1τβ+ητγγ|. (8)

The peculiar form of the presented Kraus operators originates from the concatenation formula Φ(κ,μ)=ΦQLτΦQLη that shows the channel Φ(κ,μ) can always be thought of as a sequential application of the quantum limited attenuator ΦQLη (with the attenuation factor η) and the quantum limited amplifier ΦQLτ (with the power gain τ). Using the diagonal sum representation above it is not hard to see the effect of the channel Φ(κ,μ) on the outer product of coherent states, namely,

Φ(κ,μ)[|γδ|]=d2σπτfγδ(σ)|ητγ+τ1τσητδ+τ1τσ|, (9)
fγδ(σ)=expητ1|γ|2+|δ|22+(1η)γδ*+η(τ1)τRe[σ*(γ+δ)]|σ|2τ. (10)

Since any density operator ϱ can be decomposed as ϱ=π2d2γd2δγ|ϱ|δ|γδ|, Equations (9) and (10) define the effect of the Gaussian channel Φ(κ,μ) on any state (including non-Gaussian ones).

3. Entanglement Witness

A bipartite state ϱAB is called entangled if it cannot be represented by a convex sum of density operators ϱkA and ϱkB for individual subsystems A and B. Otherwise the state is separable. In our case each subsystem is a mode of electromagnetic radiation, so we analyze a two-mode entanglement. Although simple and physically clear entanglement criterions are known for Gaussian two-mode systems [41,54], they are still missing for non-Gaussian states. For this reason we resort to an entanglement witness formalism that enables us to detect entanglement within non-Gaussian states too [40].

Consider a Hermitian operator

Wλ=1π2d2αd2βeλ(|α|2+|β|2)|αβ||βα|, (11)

which reduces to a swapping operator if λ=0. The important feature of this operator with λR is that its average value is nonnegative in any separable state because

ϕA|χB|Wλ|ϕA|χB=1πd2αeλ|α|2ϕA|αα|χB20 (12)

for all vectors |ϕA and |χB. Therefore, Wλ is an entanglement witness in the sense that the negativity in the average value tr[ϱABWλ] can only arise from the entangled state ϱAB, so tr[ϱABWλ]<0 unambiguously indicates the entanglement between subsystems A and B. If λ>0, then Wλ is an unbounded operator; however, the average value tr[ϱABWλ] may still be finite.

Suppose the local Gaussian channel ΦA(κ1,μ1)ΦB(κ2,μ2) acts on some two-mode pure state |ψABψAB|, then the output state ϱAB=ΦA(κ1,μ1)ΦB(κ2,μ2)[|ψABψAB|] is verified to be entangled if tr[ϱABWλ]<0 for some λR. One can actually adjust the input state |ψABψAB| to be dependent on the channel parameters κ1, μ1, κ2, μ2 in order to find a robust entangled state for a given channel.

4. Robust Non-Gaussian Entanglement

Here we present a non-Gaussian state |ψcABψcAB|, which exhibits high resilience to the local Gaussian noise ΦA(κ1,μ1)ΦB(κ2,μ2). A real scaling coefficient cR describes asymmetry in the skewed two-mode “cat state”

|ψcAB=|γ|0|0|cγ21exp(1+c2)|γ|22, (13)

where |γ and |cγ are coherent states and |0 is a vacuum state. At the end of this section we will make the coefficient c dependent on parameters κ1, μ1, κ2, μ2 so as to present the noise-specific resilient entangled state; however, for now we treat it as an independent parameter. If c=1, then we get a symmetric state whose entanglement is robuster against symmetric Gaussian noise ΦA(κ,μ)ΦB(κ,μ) than that of any Gaussian state [40]. When we deal with asymmetric noise ΦA(κ1,μ1)ΦB(κ2,μ2), the robustest input state is expected to be asymmetric too and this is the physical reason to consider the skewed state (13).

The output state ΦA(κ1,μ1)ΦB(κ2,μ2)[|ψcABψcAB|] is a linear combination of four operators

Φ(κ1,μ1)[|γγ|]Φ(κ2,μ2)[|00|], (14)
Φ(κ1,μ1)[|γ0|]Φ(κ2,μ2)[|0cγ|], (15)
Φ(κ1,μ1)[|0γ|]Φ(κ2,μ2)[|cγ0|], (16)
Φ(κ1,μ1)[|00|]Φ(κ2,μ2)[|cγcγ|]. (17)

Each of the operators (14)–(17) is readily calculated via Equation (9) and then used to calculate the Hilbert-Schmidt scalar product with the entanglement witness Wλ:

trWλΦ(κ1,μ1)[|γγ|]Φ(κ2,μ2)[|00|], (18)
trWλΦ(κ1,μ1)[|γ0|]Φ(κ2,μ2)[|0cγ|], (19)
trWλΦ(κ1,μ1)[|0γ|]Φ(κ2,μ2)[|cγ0|], (20)
trWλΦ(κ1,μ1)[|00|]Φ(κ2,μ2)[|cγcγ|]. (21)

The straightforward integral calculations show that all four expressions are finite if

λ<1(τ11)(τ21)τ1τ2. (22)

Suppose γ0, then it is not hard to see via the Taylor series that the condition

trWλΦA(κ1,μ1)ΦB(κ2,μ2)[|ψcABψcAB|]<0 (23)

is fulfilled if the following inequality is met for the leading term (proportional to |γ|2):

b1λ22b2λ+b3<0, (24)
b1=1η1+c2(1η2), (25)
b2=b1cη1η2τ1τ2, (26)
b3=[τ1(1η1)+τ21]2cη1τ1η2τ2+c2[τ1+τ2(1η2)1]τ1τ2, (27)

where τi,ηi are expressed through κi,μi via Equation (7), i=1,2. Some elementary algebra yields that the inequality (24) is fulfilled for some λ satisfying (22) if

τ1<1+c2(1η2)1η1+c2(1η2)andτ2<1η1+c21η1+c2(1η2). (28)

Since the limit γ0 has been used in the derivation above, we actually get the one-photon continuous-variable state

|ψ˜cAB=|1|0c|0|11+c2, (29)

where |1 is a single-photon Fock state. Inequalities (28) give sufficient conditions under which the output state ΦA(κ1,μ1)ΦB(κ2,μ2)[|ψ˜cABψ˜cAB|] is entangled. These inequalities can be rewritten in terms of the additional noise on top of the quantum-limited operation, ai=μi12|κi1|0, i=1,2, as the following result.

Proposition 1.

The output state ΦA(κ1,μ1)ΦB(κ2,μ2)[|ψ˜cABψ˜cAB|] is entangled if

  • both ΦA(κ1,μ1) and ΦB(κ2,μ2) are attenuators (κ1,21) and
    a1<κ1(1+a2)(c2+1)(1+a2)c2κ2,a2<c2κ2(1+a1)(c2+1)(1+a1)κ1; (30)
  • ΦA(κ1,μ1) is an attenuator (κ11) and ΦB(κ2,μ2) is an amplifier (κ21) and
    a1<κ1(κ2+a2)κ2+(c2+1)a2,a2<1κ2(1+a1κ1)(c2+1)(1+a1)κ1; (31)
  • both ΦA(κ1,μ1) and ΦB(κ2,μ2) are amplifiers (κ1,21) and
    a1<1c2κ1a2κ2+(c2+1)a2,a2<1κ2a1c2κ1+(c2+1)a1, (32)

where ai=μi12|κi1|0, i=1,2.

If c=1 and we deal with a symmetric state |ψ˜1=12|1|0|0|1, then Proposition 1 reproduces the known results from Ref. [40]; however, if c1, then Proposition 1 gives a valuable generalization. In Figure 2, we depict typical noise levels tolerated by the state |ψ˜c without losing entanglement. If we choose specific values of κ1, κ2, and c, then the shaded region in Figure 2 shows the extra noises a1, a2, which do not destroy entanglement of |ψ˜c. One can clearly see that the non-Gaussian state |ψ˜c outperforms all Gaussian ones (dashed line) if we deal with a two-side (asymmetric or symmetric) amplification (Figure 2c); however, a single state |ψ˜c with some fixed value of c cannot outperform all Gaussian states (dashed line) in the case of asymmetric attenuation (κ1,2<1, κ1>κ2, Figure 2d) or in the case of amplification-attenuation channel (κ1>1>κ2, Figure 2b). If a2 tends to zero, then ΦB(κ2,μ2) approaches the quantum limited attenuation and the high-energy Gaussian entanglement tolerates this noise. Dashed line in Figure 2 corresponds to the infinite-energy two-mode squeezed state [40]. Nonetheless, varying the parameter c, we cover the area in the extra noise space (a1,a2) which is strictly larger than the area for the Gaussian states (dashed line, Equation (1)) and fully comprises the latter. Some elementary algebra shows that the envelope curve for the former area (the arc of an ellipsoid in Figure 2) is exactly given by the equation κ1μ22+κ2μ12=14(κ1+κ2)(1+κ1κ2). Therefore, if the inequality (2) is fulfilled, then there exists some c=cκ1μ1κ2μ2 such that the state ΦA(κ1,μ1)ΦB(κ2,μ2)[|ψ˜cABψ˜cAB| is entangled.

Figure 2.

Figure 2

Region of the extra noise ai in the Gaussian attenuator/amplifier with the attenuation factor/power gain κi, i=1,2, within which the non-Gaussian state |ψ˜cAB remains entangled. Dashed line corresponds to the boundary attainable with Gaussian states.

Example 1.

Consider the Gaussian local attenuation dynamics eL1teL2t with the time-dependent parameters (5), where the rates Γ1=Γ2=Γ and n¯1=0.5, n¯2=1.5. Then

κ1(t)=κ2(t)=eΓt,μ1(t)=1eΓt,μ2(t)=2(1eΓt).

In such dynamics, the fundamental threshold (1) implies that no Gaussian entanglement can survive if Γtln230.405. On the other hand, the inequality (2) implies that the non-Gaussian entanglement of states (13) may be preserved up to the threshold Γt=ln101990.467. In Figure 3, we show both thresholds as well as the dynamics of entanglement for Gaussian and non-Gaussian states. Non–Gaussian entanglement is characterized by the introduced entanglement witness, namely, the quantity tr[Wλϱ(t)] with λ=0.74. As initial states we use the non-Gaussian state (13) with γ=1 and c=2, which has the energy 2.7 photons, and the single-photon non-Gaussian state (29) with c=2. Figure 3 suggests that these non-Gaussian states remain entangled after passing the Gaussian threshold, with the single-photon state exhibiting stronger resilience for the entanglement measure used. The latter fact is in agreement with the earlier observations on the low-energy entanglement robustness [37]. (Non-monotonic behavior of our entanglement measure for the higher-energy state should not be surprising as the witness operator Wλ assigns higher values to coherent states with higher amplitude. As the noise increases, the overlap with high-amplitude states increases too. In this sense, our entanglement measure is not an entanglement monotone but it is rather a very sensitive entanglement detector for slightly entangled states.) As examples of Gaussian states we consider two-mode squeezed vacuum states with the same initial energy (2.7 photons and 1 photon). Unfortunately, our entanglement measure diverges for these states so we resort to the Simon criterion (necessary and sufficient condition for two-mode Gaussian entanglement [41]), namely, the entanglement measure is the minimal eigenvalue of the matrix V(p2p2)i2Δ, where V is the covariance matrix and V(p2p2) is its modified version obtained via inversion of the momentum operator for the second mode. Figure 3 illustrates that the entanglement of such Gaussian states vanishes before the Gaussian threshold. The entanglement death time approaches the Gaussian threshold if the energy of the two-mode squeezed state tends to infinity. Whatever low the non-Gaussian entanglement can be after passing the Gaussian threshold, Ref. [38] suggests that this entanglement is distillable in general, so it can be converted into a useful form. In principle, there may exist non-Gaussian states that remain entangled even after the established non-Gaussian threshold, because this threshold was derived for a specific family of non-Gaussian states {|ψcAB} and a specific entanglement measure tr[Wλϱ(t)].

Figure 3.

Figure 3

Entanglement dynamics for Gaussian and non-Gaussian states in Example 1 vs. dimensionless time. Inequalities (1) and (2) establish thresholds for general Gaussian and specific non-Gaussian entanglement death time, respectively.

To make the analysis complete and more applicable to practice we specify how the advantageous parameter cκ1μ1κ2μ2 should be chosen for given channel parameters κ1, μ1, κ2, μ2. Suppose the channel parameters κ1, μ1, κ2, μ2 satisfy the inequality (2), then we fix the amplification/attenuation parameters κ1,2 and find the maximally permissible noise levels μ˜1,2 by projecting the point (μ1,μ2) onto the boundary of the ellipsoid (see Figure 4), namely,

μ˜i=μi14(κ1+κ2)(1+κ1κ2)κ1μ22+κ2μ12,i=1,2. (33)

Then the advantageous parameter cκ1μ1κ2μ2 is chosen in such a way that a corner point for the noise-toleration figure coincides with the point (a˜1,a˜2) in Figure 4, a˜i=μ˜i12|κi1|. The algebraic expression reads

cκ1μ1κ2μ2=τ˜2τ˜1+κ1τ˜1τ˜2+κ2,τ˜i=max(1,κi)+μ˜i12|κi1|,i=1,2. (34)

Figure 4.

Figure 4

Example on how to find the advantageous state |ψ˜cκ1μ1κ2μ2AB, whose entanglement is resilient against a given extra noise (a1,a2) (green dot) in the two-mode Gaussian attenuator/amplifier with the attenuation factor/power gain κ1,κ2 in the corresponding mode. Straight solid line passes through the ellipsoid center and the green dot, thus intersecting the ellipsoid (2) in the point (a˜1,a˜2) that determines cκ1μ1κ2μ2 via Formula (34).

The obtained advantageous state |ψ˜cκ1μ1κ2μ2AB has an interesting feature regarding the distribution of energy between the modes (11+c2 quanta in the first mode, c21+c2 quanta in the second mode). In Figure 2b we observe that in the case when the first mode is amplified and the second one is attenuated, sometimes it is beneficial to put more energy in the first (amplified) mode to protect entanglement. Another especially counterintuitive result takes place if both modes are asymmetrically amplified (κ1,21) and κ2>κ1+2: then cκ1μ1κ2μ2>1 irrespective to the noise admixed, i.e., it is always beneficial to put more energy in the second mode with a higher power gain to preserve entanglement.

5. Conclusions

The current study shows that the entanglement of specific low-energy non-Gaussian states has stronger resilience against local Gaussian noises as compared to that of arbitrary-energy Gaussian ones. A similar observation was made earlier in the case of symmetric Gaussian noise ΦA(κ,μ)ΦB(κ,μ); however, there was a loophole in the case of asymmetric Gaussian noises ΦA(κ1,μ1)ΦB(κ2,μ2). In this study, we have completely closed this loophole by a rigorous proof on the existence of an entangled non-Gaussian state whose entanglement can tolerate as high noises μ1 and μ2 as meet the requitement (2). The Guassian states do lose entanglement beyond the region (1), which is a subset of (2). Moreover, we have explicitly characterized the advantageous non-Gaussian single-photon skewed state |ψ˜cκ1μ1κ2μ2 that exhibits resilient entanglement and discussed peculiarities of the energy distribution among the modes in this state. Our results imply that the optimization problem of maximizing time t during which the state ΦA(κ1(t),μ1(t))ΦB(κ2(t),μ2(t))[|ψABψAB|] remains entangled definitely has a solution |ψAB beyond the set of Gaussian states. Conceptually, these results stimulate further research beyond the “Gaussian world” paradigm in quantum information science (within which solutions to optimization problems involving Gaussian channels and Gaussian measurements are supposed to be attained at Gaussian states and Gaussian ensembles).

Acknowledgments

The authors are indebted to the referees for bringing Refs. [35,42] to their attention.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, S.F.; methodology, S.F.; formal analysis, S.F. and A.T.; investigation, S.F. and A.T.; writing—original draft preparation, S.F.; writing—review and editing, S.F.; visualization for Figure 1, S.F.; visualization for Figure 2 and Figure 4, A.T.; visualization for Figure 3, S.F. and A.T.; supervision, S.F. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Institutional Review Board Statement

Not applicable.

Informed Consent Statement

Not applicable.

Data Availability Statement

Not applicable.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Funding Statement

This research received no external funding.

Footnotes

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