Do Large Number of Parties Enforce Monogamy in All Quantum Correlations?
arXiv:1312.6640 · doi:10.1103/PhysRevA.91.012341
Abstract
Monogamy is a non-classical property that restricts the sharability of quantum correlation among the constituents of a multipartite quantum system. Quantum correlations may satisfy or violate monogamy for quantum states. Here we provide evidence that almost all pure quantum states of systems consisting of a large number of subsystems are monogamous with respect to all quantum correlation measures of both the entanglement-separability and the information-theoretic paradigms, indicating that the volume of the monogamous pure quantum states increases with an increasing number of parties. Nonetheless, we identify important classes of pure states that remain non-monogamous with respect to quantum discord and quantum work-deficit, irrespective of the number of qubits. We find conditions for which a given quantum correlation measure satisfies vis-Ã -vis violates monogamy.
9 pages, 4 figs, RevTeX4.1; v2: slight changes in presentation, results unchanged