7 research outputs found
Experimental Proposal for Achieving Superadditive Communication Capacities with a Binary Quantum Alphabet
We demonstrate superadditivity in the communication capacity of a binary
alphabet consisting of two nonorthogonal quantum states. For this scheme,
collective decoding is performed two transmissions at a time. This improves
upon the previous schemes of Sasaki et al. [Phys. Rev. A 58, 146 (1998)] where
superadditivity was not achieved until a decoding of three or more
transmissions at a time. This places superadditivity within the regime of a
near-term laboratory demonstration. We propose an experimental test based upon
an alphabet of low photon-number coherent states where the signal decoding is
done with atomic state measurements on a single atom in a high-finesse optical
cavity.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
Spacetime Coarse Grainings in the Decoherent Histories Approach to Quantum Theory
We investigate the possibility of assigning consistent probabilities to sets
of histories characterized by whether they enter a particular subspace of the
Hilbert space of a closed system during a given time interval. In particular we
investigate the case that this subspace is a region of the configuration space.
This corresponds to a particular class of coarse grainings of spacetime
regions. We consider the arrival time problem and the problem of time in
reparametrization invariant theories as for example in canonical quantum
gravity. Decoherence conditions and probabilities for those application are
derived. The resulting decoherence condition does not depend on the explicit
form of the restricted propagator that was problematic for generalizations such
as application in quantum cosmology. Closely related is the problem of
tunnelling time as well as the quantum Zeno effect. Some interpretational
comments conclude, and we discuss the applicability of this formalism to deal
with the arrival time problem.Comment: 23 pages, Few changes and added references in v