Super-exponential distinguishability of correlated quantum states
Abstract
In the problem of asymptotic binary i.i.d. state discrimination, the optimal asymptotics of the type I and the type II error probabilities is in general an exponential decrease to zero as a function of the number of samples; the set of achievable exponent pairs is characterized by the quantum Hoeffding bound theorem. A super-exponential decrease for both types of error probabilities is only possible in the trivial case when the two states are orthogonal, and hence can be perfectly distinguished using only a single copy of the system. In this paper we show that a qualitatively different behaviour can occur when there is correlation between the samples. Namely, we use gauge-invariant and translation-invariant quasi-free states on the algebra of the canonical anti-commutation relations to exhibit pairs of states on an infinite spin chain with the properties that a) all finite-size restrictions of the states have invertible density operators, and b) the type I and the type II error probabilities both decrease to zero at least with the speed e-nc n with some positive constant c, i.e., with a super-exponential speed in the sample size n. Particular examples of such states include the ground states of the XX model corresponding to different transverse magnetic fields. In fact, we prove our result in the setting of binary composite hypothesis testing, and hence it can be applied to prove super-exponential distinguishability of the hypotheses that the transverse magnetic field is above a certain threshold vs. that it is below a strictly lower value.
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