10,867 research outputs found
Testing a Quantum Computer
The problem of quantum test is formally addressed. The presented method
attempts the quantum role of classical test generation and test set reduction
methods known from standard binary and analog circuits. QuFault, the authors
software package generates test plans for arbitrary quantum circuits using the
very efficient simulator QuIDDPro[1]. The quantum fault table is introduced and
mathematically formalized, and the test generation method explained.Comment: 15 pages, 17 equations, 27 tables, 8 figure
On Series of Multiqubit Bell's Inequalities
We overview series of multiqubit Bell's inequalities which apply to
correlation functions. We present conditions that quantum states must satisfy
to violate such inequalities.Comment: 10 page
Detection of N-particle entanglement with generalized Bell inequalities
We show that the generalized Bell-type inequality, explicitly involving
rotational symmetry of physical laws, is very efficient in distinguishing
between true N-particle quantum correlations and correlations involving less
particles. This applies to various types of generalized partial separabilities.
We also give a rigorous proof that the new Bell inequalities are maximally
violated by the GHZ states, and find a very handy description of the N-qubit
correlation function.Comment: 5 pages, minor typos corrected, journal versio
Degree of entanglement as a physically ill-posed problem: The case of entanglement with vacuum
We analyze an example of a photon in superposition of different modes, and
ask what is the degree of their entanglement with vacuum. The problem turns out
to be ill-posed since we do not know which representation of the algebra of
canonical commutation relations (CCR) to choose for field quantization. Once we
make a choice, we can solve the question of entanglement unambiguously. So the
difficulty is not with mathematics, but with physics of the problem. In order
to make the discussion explicit we analyze from this perspective a popular
argument based on a photon leaving a beam splitter and interacting with two
two-level atoms. We first solve the problem algebraically in Heisenberg
picture, without any assumption about the form of representation of CCR. Then
we take the -representation and show in two ways that in two-mode
states the modes are maximally entangled with vacuum, but single-mode states
are not entangled. Next we repeat the analysis in terms of the representation
of CCR taken from Berezin's book and show that two-mode states do not involve
the mode-vacuum entanglement. Finally, we switch to a family of reducible
representations of CCR recently investigated in the context of field
quantization, and show that the entanglement with vacuum is present even for
single-mode states. Still, the degree of entanglement is here difficult to
estimate, mainly because there are subsystems, with unspecified and
large.Comment: This paper is basically a reply to quant-ph/0507189 by S. J. van Enk
and to the remarks we got from L. Vaidman after our preliminary
quant-ph/0507151. Version accepted in Phys. Rev.
Revivals in the attractive BEC in a double-well potential and their decoherence
We study the dynamics of ultracold attractive atoms in a weakly linked two
potential wells. We consider an unbalanced initial state and monitor dynamics
of the population difference between the two wells. The average imbalance
between wells undergoes damped oscillations, like in a classical counterpart,
but then it revives almost to the initial value. We explain in details the
whole behavior using three different models of the system. Furthermore we
investigate the sensitivity of the revivals on the decoherence caused by one-
and three-body losses. We include the dissipative processes using appropriate
master equations and solve them using the stochastic wave approximation method
Enabling Electroweak Baryogenesis through Dark Matter
We study the impact on electroweak baryogenesis from a swifter cosmological
expansion induced by dark matter. We detail the experimental bounds that one
can place on models that realize it, and we investigate the modifications of
these bounds that result from a non-standard cosmological history. The
modifications can be sizeable if the expansion rate of the Universe increases
by several orders of magnitude. We illustrate the impact through the example of
scalar field dark matter, which can alter the cosmological history enough to
enable a strong-enough first-order phase transition in the Standard Model when
it is supplemented by a dimension six operator directly modifying the Higgs
boson potential. We show that due to the modified cosmological history,
electroweak baryogenesis can be realized, while keeping deviations of the
triple Higgs coupling below HL-LHC sensitivies. The required scale of new
physics to effectuate a strong-enough first order phase transition can change
by as much as twenty percent as the expansion rate increases by six orders of
magnitude
N-particle nonclassicality without N-particle correlations
Most of known multipartite Bell inequalities involve correlation functions
for all subsystems. They are useless for entangled states without such
correlations. We give a method of derivation of families of Bell inequalities
for N parties, which involve, e.g., only (N-1)-partite correlations, but still
are able to detect proper N-partite entanglement. We present an inequality
which reveals five-partite entanglement despite only four-partite correlations.
Classes of inequalities introduced here can be put into a handy form of a
single non-linear inequality. An example is given of an N qubit state, which
strongly violates such an inequality, despite having no N-qubit correlations.
This surprising property might be of potential value for quantum information
tasks.Comment: 5 page
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