Hemant K. Mishra

2papers

2 Papers

QUANT-PHMar 4
Barycentric bounds on the error exponents of quantum hypothesis exclusion

Kaiyuan Ji, Hemant K. Mishra, Milán Mosonyi et al.

Quantum state exclusion is an operational task with application to ontological interpretations of quantum states. In such a task, one is given a system whose state is randomly selected from a finite set, and the goal is to identify a state from the set that is not the true state of the system. An error occurs if and only if the state identified is the true state. In this paper, we study the optimal error probability of quantum state exclusion and its error exponent from an information-theoretic perspective. Our main finding is a single-letter upper bound on the error exponent of state exclusion given by the multivariate log-Euclidean Chernoff divergence, and we prove that this improves upon the best previously known upper bound. We also extend our analysis to quantum channel exclusion, and we establish a single-letter and efficiently computable upper bound on its error exponent, admitting the use of adaptive strategies. We derive both upper bounds, for state and channel exclusion, based on one-shot analysis and formulate them as a type of multivariate divergence measure called a barycentric Chernoff divergence. Moreover, our result on channel exclusion has implications in two important special cases. First, when there are two hypotheses, our result provides the first known efficiently computable upper bound on the error exponent of symmetric binary channel discrimination. Second, when all channels are classical, we show that our upper bound is achievable by a parallel strategy, thus solving the exact error exponent of classical channel exclusion.

QUANT-PHOct 23, 2025
Converse bounds for quantum hypothesis exclusion: A divergence-radius approach

Kaiyuan Ji, Hemant K. Mishra, Milán Mosonyi et al.

Hypothesis exclusion is an information-theoretic task in which an experimenter aims at ruling out a false hypothesis from a finite set of known candidates, and an error occurs if and only if the hypothesis being ruled out is the ground truth. For the tasks of quantum state exclusion and quantum channel exclusion -- where hypotheses are represented by quantum states and quantum channels, respectively -- efficiently computable upper bounds on the asymptotic error exponents were established in a recent work of the current authors [Ji et al., arXiv:2407.13728 (2024)], where the derivation was based on nonasymptotic analysis. In this companion paper of our previous work, we provide alternative proofs for the same upper bounds on the asymptotic error exponents of quantum state and channel exclusion, but using a conceptually different approach from the one adopted in the previous work. Specifically, we apply strong converse results for asymmetric binary hypothesis testing to distinguishing an arbitrary ``dummy'' hypothesis from each of the concerned candidates. This leads to the desired upper bounds in terms of divergence radii via a geometrically inspired argument.