28 research outputs found
Entanglement rates for bipartite open systems
We provide upper bound on the maximal rate at which irreversible quantum
dynamics can generate entanglement in a bipartite system. The generator of
irreversible dynamics consists of a Hamiltonian and dissipative terms in
Lindblad form. The relative entropy of entanglement is chosen as a measure of
entanglement in an ancilla-free system. We provide an upper bound on the
entangling rate which has a logarithmic dependence on a dimension of a smaller
system in a bipartite cut. We also investigate the rate of change of quantum
mutual information in an ancilla-assisted system and provide an upper bound
independent of dimension of ancillas
Complete criterion for convex-Gaussian state detection
We present a new criterion that determines whether a fermionic state is a
convex combination of pure Gaussian states. This criterion is complete and
characterizes the set of convex-Gaussian states from the inside. If a state
passes a program it is a convex-Gaussian state and any convex-Gaussian state
can be approximated with arbitrary precision by states passing the criterion.
The criterion is presented in the form of a sequence of solvable semidefinite
programs. It is also complementary to the one developed by de Melo, Cwiklinski
and Terhal, which aims at characterizing the set of convex-Gaussian states from
the outside. Here we present an explicit proof that criterion by de Melo et al.
is complete, by estimating a distance between an n-extendible state, a state
that passes the criterion, to the set of convex-Gaussian states
Dynamical Coherence Measures
We present several measures of the dynamic coherence of channels and
investigate their properties
Universal adiabatic quantum computation via the space-time circuit-to-Hamiltonian construction
We show how to perform universal adiabatic quantum computation using a
Hamiltonian which describes a set of particles with local interactions on a
two-dimensional grid. A single parameter in the Hamiltonian is adiabatically
changed as a function of time to simulate the quantum circuit. We bound the
eigenvalue gap above the unique groundstate by mapping our model onto the
ferromagnetic XXZ chain with kink boundary conditions; the gap of this spin
chain was computed exactly by Koma and Nachtergaele using its -deformed
version of SU(2) symmetry. We also discuss a related time-independent
Hamiltonian which was shown by Janzing to be capable of universal computation.
We observe that in the limit of large system size, the time evolution is
equivalent to the exactly solvable quantum walk on Young's lattice