Showing that a state is unentangled under a certain condition

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Homework Statement
Show that a two-qubit state vector

$$ |\phi \rangle = c_{00} |00\rangle + c_{01} |01\rangle + c_{10} |10\rangle + c_{11} |11\rangle \tag{*}$$

is non-entangled iff

$$c_{00} c_{11} = c_{01}c_{10} \tag{**}$$
Relevant Equations
$$\hat \rho = \sum_m \rho_m |\phi_m \rangle \langle \phi_m | \tag{1}$$

$$|\phi_k \rangle = \sum_{m,n} c_{m,n}^k | a_m b_n \rangle \tag{2}$$

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This is an iff statement, so we proceed as follows

##\Rightarrow## We assume that ##|\phi \rangle## is uncorrelated. Thus the state operator must be of the form ##\hat \rho = \rho^{(1)} \otimes \rho^{(2)}## (equation ##8.16## in Ballentine's book).

The spectral decomposition of the state operator ##\hat \rho## is

$$\hat \rho = \sum_m \rho_m |\phi_m \rangle \langle \phi_m | \tag{1}$$

The eigenvectors of ##\hat \rho## can be expanded in terms of its basis vectors (as suggested by ##(*)##)

$$|\phi_k \rangle = \sum_{m,n} c_{m,n}^k | a_m b_n \rangle \tag{2}$$

Plugging ##(2)## into ##(1)## we get

$$\rho = \sum_k \rho_k \sum_{m,n} \sum_{m',n'} \Big( c_{m,n}^k \Big) \Big( c_{m',n'}^k \Big)^* | a_m b_n \rangle \langle a_{m'} b_{n'} | \tag{3}$$

By definition we know that

$$\rho^{(1)} := \text{Tr}^{(2)} \rho \tag{4}$$

The matrix elements of ##\rho^{(1)}## are (i.e. we sum over ##n##)

$$\langle a_m | \rho^{(1)} | a_{m'} \rangle = \sum_n \langle a_m b_n| \rho | a_{m'} b_{n} \rangle \tag{5}$$

Based on ##(3),(5)## we get that the partial state ##\rho^{(1)}## has the following form

$$\rho^{(1)} = \sum_k \rho_k \sum_{m,m'} \sum_{n} \Big( c_{m,n}^k \Big) \Big( c_{m',n}^k \Big)^* | a_m \rangle \langle a_{m'}| \tag{6}$$

Analogously we get that ##\rho^{(2)}## has the following form

$$\rho^{(2)} = \sum_k \rho_k \sum_{n ,n'} \sum_{m} \Big( c_{m,n}^k \Big) \Big( c_{m,n'}^k \Big)^* | b_n \rangle \langle b_{n'}| \tag{7}$$

It looks to me that the statement is assuming that ##\rho_k=1## for all values of ##k## (where ##k=1,2,3,4##).

As the state operator must be of the form ##\hat \rho = \rho^{(1)} \otimes \rho^{(2)}## we get

$$\hat \rho = \Big[\sum_{m,m'} \sum_{n} \Big( c_{m,n} \Big) \Big( c_{m',n} \Big)^* | a_m \rangle \langle a_{m'}|\Big] \otimes \Big[\sum_{n ,n'} \sum_{m} \Big( c_{m,n} \Big) \Big( c_{m,n'} \Big)^* | b_n \rangle \langle b_{n'}|\Big]$$ $$=\Big[\sum_{m,m'} \sum_{n} \Big( c_{m,n} \Big) \Big( c_{m',n} \Big)^* \Big]\Big[\sum_{n ,n'} \sum_{m} \Big( c_{m,n} \Big) \Big( c_{m,n'} \Big)^* \Big]|a_{m} b_{n} \rangle \langle a_{m'} b_{n'}| \tag{8}$$

The issue I have is that I still do not see how to show ##c_{00} c_{11} = c_{01}c_{10}## out of ##(8)##

Any help is appreciated.

Thank you :biggrin:
 
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To show implication one way, you could start with an unentangled state:
$$(a|0\rangle + b|1\rangle) \otimes (c|0\rangle + d|1\rangle)$$
And show that the equation holds for the resulting coefficients.

The reverse implication requires a bit of fiddling about with complex numbers to obtain ##a, b, c, d##.
 
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PeroK said:
The reverse implication requires a bit of fiddling about with complex numbers to obtain ##a, b, c, d##.
Which is still far easier than the giant equations OP set up.
 
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Before proceeding: my understanding of an unentangled state is the following

$$|\phi \rangle = \sum_{m,n} c_{m,n} | a_m b_n \rangle=\sum_{m,n} w_m l_n | a_m \rangle \otimes| b_n \rangle$$

i.e. each state (##| a_m \rangle, | b_n \rangle##) has its own complex coefficient (##w_m, l_n##).

PeroK said:
To show implication one way, you could start with an unentangled state:
$$(a|0\rangle + b|1\rangle) \otimes (c|0\rangle + d|1\rangle)$$
And show that the equation holds for the resulting coefficients.

Alright so we have

$$(a|0\rangle + b|1\rangle) \otimes (c|0\rangle + d|1\rangle) = ac|00\rangle + ad|01\rangle + bc|10\rangle + bd |11\rangle$$

But here's my confusion: why does ##acbd = adbc## condition imply unentanglement?
 
JD_PM said:
Before proceeding: my understanding of an unentangled state is the following

$$|\phi \rangle = \sum_{m,n} c_{m,n} | a_m b_n \rangle=\sum_{m,n} w_m l_n | a_m \rangle \otimes| b_n \rangle$$

i.e. each state (##| a_m \rangle, | b_n \rangle##) has its own complex coefficient (##w_m, l_n##).
Alright so we have

$$(a|0\rangle + b|1\rangle) \otimes (c|0\rangle + d|1\rangle) = ac|00\rangle + ad|01\rangle + bc|10\rangle + bd |11\rangle$$

But here's my confusion: why does ##acbd = adbc## condition imply unentanglement?
A state is not entangled iff it is the product of (pure) single-particle states. That means explicitly that:
$$|\phi \rangle = (a|0\rangle + b|1\rangle) \otimes (c|0\rangle + d|1\rangle)$$
Where $$a|0\rangle + b|1\rangle, \ \ \text{and} \ \ c|0\rangle + d|1\rangle$$ are the single-particle states. The state is entangled, therefore, iff it cannot be written in this form.

You have shown the implication one way: unentangled implies ##c_{00}c_{11} = c_{01}c_{10}##.

The converse requires some work. You could start with this equation and explicitly construct ##a, b, c, d## from the coefficients ##c_{mn}##.
 
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PeroK said:
The converse requires some work. You could start with this equation and explicitly construct ##a, b, c, d## from the coefficients ##c_{mn}##.

Let's proceed.

##\Rightarrow## We assume ##c_{00}c_{11} = c_{01}c_{10}##.

Based on ##|\phi \rangle = \sum_{m,n} c_{m,n} | a_m b_n \rangle## we get

$$|\phi \rangle = c_{00} | 00 \rangle + c_{11} | 11 \rangle + c_{10} | 10 \rangle + c_{01} | 01 \rangle $$

We now can set ##c_{00}=ac, c_{11}=bd, c_{10}=bc, c_{01}=ad## to get

$$|\phi \rangle = (a|0\rangle + b|1\rangle) (c|0\rangle + d|1\rangle)$$

I guess we now have to use ##c_{00}c_{11} = c_{01}c_{10}## to show that ##(a|0\rangle + b|1\rangle) \otimes (c|0\rangle + d|1\rangle)## holds.

Mmm I still do not see it though ...
 
JD_PM said:
Let's proceed.

##\Rightarrow## We assume ##c_{00}c_{11} = c_{01}c_{10}##.

Based on ##|\phi \rangle = \sum_{m,n} c_{m,n} | a_m b_n \rangle## we get

$$|\phi \rangle = c_{00} | 00 \rangle + c_{11} | 11 \rangle + c_{10} | 10 \rangle + c_{01} | 01 \rangle $$

We now can set ##c_{00}=ac, c_{11}=bd, c_{10}=bc, c_{01}=ad## to get

$$|\phi \rangle = (a|0\rangle + b|1\rangle) (c|0\rangle + d|1\rangle)$$

I guess we now have to use ##c_{00}c_{11} = c_{01}c_{10}## to show that ##(a|0\rangle + b|1\rangle) \otimes (c|0\rangle + d|1\rangle)## holds.

Mmm I still do not see it though ...
You need to use the constraints of the problem.

First, if any of the coefficents ##c_{mn} = 0##, then the problem becomes trivial (exercise). So, the difficult case is when they are all non-zero. In that case, you have ##c_{11} = \frac{c_{01}c_{10}}{c_{00}}##.

You may also need that ##c_{00}^2 + c_{01}^2 + c_{10}^2 + c_{11}^2 = 1##.

Finally, it helps a little if you see that you can always take ##a## to be real.

Then, it's not too bad. But, it's not something you can just "see".
 
Mmm honestly I still do not see it.

I am sure it has to be done by comparing ##c_{mn}## to ##a,b,c,d## coefficients.

If I get it I'll post it :smile:
 
JD_PM said:
Mmm honestly I still do not see it.

I am sure it has to be done by comparing ##c_{mn}## to ##a,b,c,d## coefficients.

If I get it I'll post it :smile:
Try
$$a = \frac{|c_{00}|}{\sqrt{|c_{00}|^2 + |c_{10}|^2}}$$
 
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Hi PeroK

PeroK said:
Try
$$a = \frac{|c_{00}|}{\sqrt{|c_{00}|^2 + |c_{10}|^2}}$$

Naive question: how did you get it?
 
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JD_PM said:
Naive question: how did you get it?
First, let me use ##A, B, C, D## instead of ##c_{00} \dots##. What I did was this:
$$ ac = A, ad = B, bc = C, bd = D = \frac{BC}{A}$$
This gives
$$\frac b a = \frac C A, \ \ \text{hence} \ \ b = \frac C A a$$
Then use
$$|a|^2 + |b|^2 = 1$$
To get ##|a|## and then take ##a## to be real and positive.
 
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