Phys. Rev. A 71, 033814 (2005) [11 pages]Continuous-variable quantum-state sharing via quantum disentanglementReceived 26 November 2004; published 24 March 2005 Quantum-state sharing is a protocol where perfect reconstruction of quantum states is achieved with incomplete or partial information in a multipartite quantum network. Quantum-state sharing allows for secure communication in a quantum network where partial information is lost or acquired by malicious parties. This protocol utilizes entanglement for the secret-state distribution and a class of “quantum disentangling” protocols for the state reconstruction. We demonstrate a quantum-state sharing protocol in which a tripartite entangled state is used to encode and distribute a secret state to three players. Any two of these players can collaborate to reconstruct the secret state, while individual players obtain no information. We investigate a number of quantum disentangling processes and experimentally demonstrate quantum-state reconstruction using two of these protocols. We experimentally measure a fidelity, averaged over all reconstruction permutations, of F=0.73±0.02. A result achievable only by using quantum resources. © 2005 The American Physical Society URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevA.71.033814
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevA.71.033814
PACS:
42.50.Dv, 03.67.Dd, 42.65.Yj
|
