Positivity and entanglement of polynomial Gaussian integral operators

Abstract

Positivity preservation is an important issue in the dynamics of open quantum systems: positivity violations always mark the border of validity of the model. We investigate the positivity of self-adjoint polynomial Gaussian integral operators PG, that is, the multivariable kernel PG is a product of a polynomial P and a Gaussian kernel G. These operators frequently appear in open quantum systems. We show that PG can be only positive if the Gaussian part is positive, which yields a strong and quite easy test for positivity. This has an important corollary for the bipartite entanglement of the density operators PG: if the Gaussian density operator G fails the Peres-Horodecki criterion, then the corresponding polynomial Gaussian density operators PG also fail the criterion for all P, hence they are all entangled. We prove that polynomial Gaussian operators with polynomials of odd degree cannot be positive semidefinite. We introduce a new preorder on Gaussian kernels such that if G0 G1 then PG0≥ 0 implies PG1≥ 0 for all polynomials P. Therefore, deciding the positivity of a polynomial Gaussian operator determines the positivity of a lot of another polynomial Gaussian operators having the same polynomial factor, which might improve any given positivity test by carrying it out on a much larger set of operators. We will show an example that this really can make positivity tests much more sensitive and efficient. This preorder has implication for the entanglement problem, too.

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