Remote state preparation without oblivious conditions

A. Hayashi, T. Hashimoto, and M. Horibe
Phys. Rev. A 67, 052302 – Published 13 May 2003
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Abstract

In quantum teleportation, neither Alice nor Bob acquires any classical knowledge on teleported states. The teleportation protocol is said to be oblivious to both parties. In remote state preparation (RSP), it is assumed that Alice is given complete classical knowledge on the state that is to be prepared by Bob. Recently, Leung and Shor [e-print quant-ph/0201008] showed that the same amount of classical information as that in teleportation needs to be transmitted in any exact and deterministic RSP protocol that is oblivious to Bob. Assuming that the dimension of subsystems in the prior-entangled state is the same as the dimension of the input space, we study similar RSP protocols, but not necessarily oblivious to Bob. We show that in this case Bob’s quantum operation can be safely assumed to be a unitary transformation. We then derive an equation that is a necessary and sufficient condition for such a protocol to exist. By studying this equation, we show that one-qubit RSP requires two classical bits of communication, which is the same amount as in teleportation, even if the protocol is not assumed oblivious to Bob. For higher dimensions, it is still an open question whether the amount of classical communication can be reduced by abandoning oblivious conditions.

  • Received 2 May 2002

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevA.67.052302

©2003 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

A. Hayashi, T. Hashimoto, and M. Horibe

  • Department of Applied Physics, Fukui University, Fukui 910, Japan

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Vol. 67, Iss. 5 — May 2003

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