Abstract
Steerability is a characteristic of quantum correlations lying between entanglement and Bell nonlocality. Understanding how these steering correlations can be shared between different parties has profound applications in ensuring the security of quantum communication protocols. Here we show that at most two bipartite reduced states of a three-qubit state can violate the three-setting CJWR linear steering inequality, contrary to the two-setting linear steering inequality. This result explains that quantum steering correlations have limited shareability properties apart from the conventional 'nonshareable' monogamy constraint. In contrast to the two-measurement-setting scenario, the three-setting scenario turns out to be more useful for developing a deeper understanding of the shareability of tripartite steering correlations. Apart from the distribution of steering correlations, several relations between reduced bipartite steering, different measures of bipartite entanglement of reduced states, and genuine tripartite entanglement are presented here. The results enable the detection of different kinds of tripartite entanglement.
- Received 2 July 2020
- Accepted 19 October 2020
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevA.102.052209
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