Abstract

While Bohr's complementarity principle constitutes a bedrock of quantum mechanics with profound implications, coherence, as a defining feature of the quantum realm originating from the superposition principle, pervades almost every quantum consideration. By exploiting the algebraic and geometric structure of state-channel interaction, we show that an information-theoretic measure of coherence and a quantitative symmetry-asymmetry complementarity emerge naturally from the formalism of quantum mechanics. This is achieved by decomposing the state-channel interaction into a symmetric part and an asymmetric part, which satisfy a conservation relation. The symmetric part is represented by the symmetric Jordan product, and the asymmetric part is synthesized by the skew-symmetric Lie product. The latter further leads to a significant extension of the celebrated Wigner--Yanase skew information, and has an operational interpretation as quantum coherence of a state with respect to a channel. This not only presents a basic and alternative framework for addressing complementarity, but also puts the study of coherence in a broad context involving channels. Fundamental properties of the symmetry-asymmetry complementarity are revealed, and applications and implications are illustrated via several prototypical channels as well as the Mach--Zehnder interferometry, in which the fringe visibility is linked to symmetry and the which-path is linked to asymmetry.

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