An easy measure of quantum correlation

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Abstract

To measure the quantum correlation of a bipartite state, a test matrix is constructed through the commutations among the blocks of its density matrix, which turns out to be a zero matrix for a classical state with zero quantum correlation, and a nonzero one for a quantum state with positive quantum correlation. The Frobenius norm of the test matrix is used to measure the quantum correlation, which satisfies the basic requirements for a good measure and coincides with Wootters concurrence for two-qubit pure states. Since no optimization is involved in the definition, this measure of quantum correlation is easy to compute and even can be calculated manually.

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Cao, H., Wu, Z. Q., Hu, L. Y., Xu, X. X., & Huang, J. H. (2015). An easy measure of quantum correlation. Quantum Information Processing, 14(11), 4103–4112. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11128-015-1071-4

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