161 research outputs found
Quantum metrology with nonclassical states of atomic ensembles
Quantum technologies exploit entanglement to revolutionize computing,
measurements, and communications. This has stimulated the research in different
areas of physics to engineer and manipulate fragile many-particle entangled
states. Progress has been particularly rapid for atoms. Thanks to the large and
tunable nonlinearities and the well developed techniques for trapping,
controlling and counting, many groundbreaking experiments have demonstrated the
generation of entangled states of trapped ions, cold and ultracold gases of
neutral atoms. Moreover, atoms can couple strongly to external forces and light
fields, which makes them ideal for ultra-precise sensing and time keeping. All
these factors call for generating non-classical atomic states designed for
phase estimation in atomic clocks and atom interferometers, exploiting
many-body entanglement to increase the sensitivity of precision measurements.
The goal of this article is to review and illustrate the theory and the
experiments with atomic ensembles that have demonstrated many-particle
entanglement and quantum-enhanced metrology.Comment: 76 pages, 40 figures, 1 table, 603 references. Some figures bitmapped
at 300 dpi to reduce file siz
Advances in Bosonic Quantum Error Correction with Gottesman-Kitaev-Preskill Codes: Theory, Engineering and Applications
Encoding quantum information into a set of harmonic oscillators is considered
a hardware efficient approach to mitigate noise for reliable quantum
information processing. Various codes have been proposed to encode a qubit into
an oscillator -- including cat codes, binomial codes and
Gottesman-Kitaev-Preskill (GKP) codes. These bosonic codes are among the first
to reach a break-even point for quantum error correction. Furthermore, GKP
states not only enable close-to-optimal quantum communication rates in bosonic
channels, but also allow for error correction of an oscillator into many
oscillators. This review focuses on the basic working mechanism, performance
characterization, and the many applications of GKP codes, with emphasis on
recent experimental progress in superconducting circuit architectures and
theoretical progress in multimode GKP qubit codes and
oscillators-to-oscillators (O2O) codes. We begin with a preliminary
continuous-variable formalism needed for bosonic codes. We then proceed to the
quantum engineering involved to physically realize GKP states. We take a deep
dive into GKP stabilization and preparation in superconducting architectures
and examine proposals for realizing GKP states in the optical domain (along
with a concise review of GKP realization in trapped-ion platforms). Finally, we
present multimode GKP qubits and GKP-O2O codes, examine code performance and
discuss applications of GKP codes in quantum information processing tasks such
as computing, communication, and sensing.Comment: 77+5 pages, 31 figures. Minor bugs fixed in v2. comments are welcome
From Classical to Quantum Shannon Theory
The aim of this book is to develop "from the ground up" many of the major,
exciting, pre- and post-millenium developments in the general area of study
known as quantum Shannon theory. As such, we spend a significant amount of time
on quantum mechanics for quantum information theory (Part II), we give a
careful study of the important unit protocols of teleportation, super-dense
coding, and entanglement distribution (Part III), and we develop many of the
tools necessary for understanding information transmission or compression (Part
IV). Parts V and VI are the culmination of this book, where all of the tools
developed come into play for understanding many of the important results in
quantum Shannon theory.Comment: v8: 774 pages, 301 exercises, 81 figures, several corrections; this
draft, pre-publication copy is available under a Creative Commons
Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike license (see
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/), "Quantum Information
Theory, Second Edition" is available for purchase from Cambridge University
Pres
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