923 research outputs found
Combined Error Correction Techniques for Quantum Computing Architectures
Proposals for quantum computing devices are many and varied. They each have
unique noise processes that make none of them fully reliable at this time.
There are several error correction/avoidance techniques which are valuable for
reducing or eliminating errors, but not one, alone, will serve as a panacea.
One must therefore take advantage of the strength of each of these techniques
so that we may extend the coherence times of the quantum systems and create
more reliable computing devices. To this end we give a general strategy for
using dynamical decoupling operations on encoded subspaces. These encodings may
be of any form; of particular importance are decoherence-free subspaces and
quantum error correction codes. We then give means for empirically determining
an appropriate set of dynamical decoupling operations for a given experiment.
Using these techniques, we then propose a comprehensive encoding solution to
many of the problems of quantum computing proposals which use exchange-type
interactions. This uses a decoherence-free subspace and an efficient set of
dynamical decoupling operations. It also addresses the problems of
controllability in solid state quantum dot devices.Comment: Contribution to Proceedings of the 2002 Physics of Quantum
Electronics Conference", to be published in J. Mod. Optics. This paper
provides a summary and review of quant-ph/0205156 and quant-ph/0112054, and
some new result
Encoded Universality for Generalized Anisotropic Exchange Hamiltonians
We derive an encoded universality representation for a generalized
anisotropic exchange Hamiltonian that contains cross-product terms in addition
to the usual two-particle exchange terms. The recently developed algebraic
approach is used to show that the minimal universality-generating encodings of
one logical qubit are based on three physical qubits. We show how to generate
both single- and two-qubit operations on the logical qubits, using suitably
timed conjugating operations derived from analysis of the commutator algebra.
The timing of the operations is seen to be crucial in allowing simplification
of the gate sequences for the generalized Hamiltonian to forms similar to that
derived previously for the symmetric (XY) anisotropic exchange Hamiltonian. The
total number of operations needed for a controlled-Z gate up to local
transformations is five. A scalable architecture is proposed.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figure
Optimal estimation of two-qubit pure-state entanglement
We present optimal measuring strategies for the estimation of the
entanglement of unknown two-qubit pure states and of the degree of mixing of
unknown single-qubit mixed states, of which N identical copies are available.
The most general measuring strategies are considered in both situations, to
conclude in the first case that a local, although collective, measurement
suffices to estimate entanglement, a non-local property, optimally.Comment: REVTEX, 9 pages, 1 figur
Entanglement measures and approximate quantum error correction
It is shown that, if the loss of entanglement along a quantum channel is
sufficiently small, then approximate quantum error correction is possible,
thereby generalizing what happens for coherent information. Explicit bounds are
obtained for the entanglement of formation and the distillable entanglement,
and their validity naturally extends to other bipartite entanglement measures
in between. Robustness of derived criteria is analyzed and their tightness
compared. Finally, as a byproduct, we prove a bound quantifying how large the
gap between entanglement of formation and distillable entanglement can be for
any given finite dimensional bipartite system, thus providing a sufficient
condition for distillability in terms of entanglement of formation.Comment: 7 pages, two-columned revtex4, no figures. v1: Deeply revised and
extended version: different entanglement measures are separately considered,
references are added, and some remarks are stressed. v2: Added a sufficient
condition for distillability in terms of entanglement of formation; published
versio
Asymptotic entanglement in a two-dimensional quantum walk
The evolution operator of a discrete-time quantum walk involves a conditional
shift in position space which entangles the coin and position degrees of
freedom of the walker. After several steps, the coin-position entanglement
(CPE) converges to a well defined value which depends on the initial state. In
this work we provide an analytical method which allows for the exact
calculation of the asymptotic reduced density operator and the corresponding
CPE for a discrete-time quantum walk on a two-dimensional lattice. We use the
von Neumann entropy of the reduced density operator as an entanglement measure.
The method is applied to the case of a Hadamard walk for which the dependence
of the resulting CPE on initial conditions is obtained. Initial states leading
to maximum or minimum CPE are identified and the relation between the coin or
position entanglement present in the initial state of the walker and the final
level of CPE is discussed. The CPE obtained from separable initial states
satisfies an additivity property in terms of CPE of the corresponding
one-dimensional cases. Non-local initial conditions are also considered and we
find that the extreme case of an initial uniform position distribution leads to
the largest CPE variation.Comment: Major revision. Improved structure. Theoretical results are now
separated from specific examples. Most figures have been replaced by new
versions. The paper is now significantly reduced in size: 11 pages, 7 figure
Three qubits can be entangled in two inequivalent ways
Invertible local transformations of a multipartite system are used to define
equivalence classes in the set of entangled states. This classification
concerns the entanglement properties of a single copy of the state.
Accordingly, we say that two states have the same kind of entanglement if both
of them can be obtained from the other by means of local operations and
classical communcication (LOCC) with nonzero probability. When applied to pure
states of a three-qubit system, this approach reveals the existence of two
inequivalent kinds of genuine tripartite entanglement, for which the GHZ state
and a W state appear as remarkable representatives. In particular, we show that
the W state retains maximally bipartite entanglement when any one of the three
qubits is traced out. We generalize our results both to the case of higher
dimensional subsystems and also to more than three subsystems, for all of which
we show that, typically, two randomly chosen pure states cannot be converted
into each other by means of LOCC, not even with a small probability of success.Comment: 12 pages, 1 figure; replaced with revised version; terminology
adapted to earlier work; reference added; results unchange
Efficient Algorithms for Universal Quantum Simulation
A universal quantum simulator would enable efficient simulation of quantum
dynamics by implementing quantum-simulation algorithms on a quantum computer.
Specifically the quantum simulator would efficiently generate qubit-string
states that closely approximate physical states obtained from a broad class of
dynamical evolutions. I provide an overview of theoretical research into
universal quantum simulators and the strategies for minimizing computational
space and time costs. Applications to simulating many-body quantum simulation
and solving linear equations are discussed
Light scattering from an amplifying medium bounded by a randomly rough surface: A numerical study
We study by numerical simulations the scattering of -polarized light from
a rough dielectric film deposited on the planar surface of a semi-infinite
perfect conductor. The dielectric film is allowed to be either active or
passive, situations that we model by assigning negative and positive values,
respectively, to the imaginary part of the dielectric constant of
the film. We study the reflectance and the total scattered energy
for the system as functions of both and the angle of
incidence of the light. Furthermore, the positions and widths of the enhanced
backscattering and satellite peaks are discussed. It is found that these peaks
become narrower and higher when the amplification of the system is increased,
and that their widths scale linearly with . The positions of the
backscattering peaks are found to be independent of , while we find
a weak dependence on this quantity in the positions of the satellite peaks.Comment: Revtex, 9 pages, 9 figure
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