How well can an arbitrary unknown (quantum) state $\rvert \psi \rangle = \alpha\rvert 0 \rangle + \beta \rvert 1 \rangle$, be imperfectly/approximately cloned?
Given an unknown state ${\rvert \psi \rangle}$, say one can clone ${\rvert \phi \rangle}$ , such that $${\langle \phi }{\rvert \psi \rangle}= \delta$$
If $\rvert \phi \rangle$ and $\rvert \psi \rangle$ are identical and same, $\delta = 1$, however we know, due the no cloning theorem, that $\delta<1$.
My question is what is the 'highest' value of $\delta$ one can achieve using polynomial time 'resources', i.e. how well can an UNKNOWN quantum state be imperfectly cloned?
(Let's agree we $\rvert \psi \rangle$, both $\alpha, \beta$ are non-zero, i.e. not basis states)