4,203 research outputs found
Optimal Measurements for Tests of EPR-Steering with No Detection Loophole using Two-Qubit Werner States
It has been shown in earlier works that the vertices of Platonic solids are
good measurement choices for tests of EPR-steering using isotropically
entangled pairs of qubits. Such measurements are regularly spaced, and
measurement diversity is a good feature for making EPR-steering inequalities
easier to violate in the presence of experimental imperfections. However, such
measurements are provably suboptimal. Here, we develop a method for devising
optimal strategies for tests of EPR-steering, in the sense of being most robust
to mixture and inefficiency (while still closing the detection loophole of
course), for a given number of measurement settings. We allow for arbitrary
measurement directions, and arbitrary weightings of the outcomes in the
EPR-steering inequality. This is a difficult optimization problem for large
, so we also consider more practical ways of constructing near-optimal
EPR-steering inequalities in this limit.Comment: 15 pages, 11 Figure
Adaptive Quantum Measurements of a Continuously Varying Phase
We analyze the problem of quantum-limited estimation of a stochastically
varying phase of a continuous beam (rather than a pulse) of the electromagnetic
field. We consider both non-adaptive and adaptive measurements, and both dyne
detection (using a local oscillator) and interferometric detection. We take the
phase variation to be \dot\phi = \sqrt{\kappa}\xi(t), where \xi(t) is
\delta-correlated Gaussian noise. For a beam of power P, the important
dimensionless parameter is N=P/\hbar\omega\kappa, the number of photons per
coherence time. For the case of dyne detection, both continuous-wave (cw)
coherent beams and cw (broadband) squeezed beams are considered. For a coherent
beam a simple feedback scheme gives good results, with a phase variance \simeq
N^{-1/2}/2. This is \sqrt{2} times smaller than that achievable by nonadaptive
(heterodyne) detection. For a squeezed beam a more accurate feedback scheme
gives a variance scaling as N^{-2/3}, compared to N^{-1/2} for heterodyne
detection. For the case of interferometry only a coherent input into one port
is considered. The locally optimal feedback scheme is identified, and it is
shown to give a variance scaling as N^{-1/2}. It offers a significant
improvement over nonadaptive interferometry only for N of order unity.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, journal versio
Entanglement under restricted operations: Analogy to mixed-state entanglement
We show that the classification of bi-partite pure entangled states when
local quantum operations are restricted yields a structure that is analogous in
many respects to that of mixed-state entanglement. Specifically, we develop
this analogy by restricting operations through local superselection rules, and
show that such exotic phenomena as bound entanglement and activation arise
using pure states in this setting. This analogy aids in resolving several
conceptual puzzles in the study of entanglement under restricted operations. In
particular, we demonstrate that several types of quantum optical states that
possess confusing entanglement properties are analogous to bound entangled
states. Also, the classification of pure-state entanglement under restricted
operations can be much simpler than for mixed-state entanglement. For instance,
in the case of local Abelian superselection rules all questions concerning
distillability can be resolved.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures; published versio
Quantum error correction for continuously detected errors
We show that quantum feedback control can be used as a quantum error
correction process for errors induced by weak continuous measurement. In
particular, when the error model is restricted to one, perfectly measured,
error channel per physical qubit, quantum feedback can act to perfectly protect
a stabilizer codespace. Using the stabilizer formalism we derive an explicit
scheme, involving feedback and an additional constant Hamiltonian, to protect
an ()-qubit logical state encoded in physical qubits. This works for
both Poisson (jump) and white-noise (diffusion) measurement processes. In
addition, universal quantum computation is possible in this scheme. As an
example, we show that detected-spontaneous emission error correction with a
driving Hamiltonian can greatly reduce the amount of redundancy required to
protect a state from that which has been previously postulated [e.g., Alber
\emph{et al.}, Phys. Rev. Lett. 86, 4402 (2001)].Comment: 11 pages, 1 figure; minor correction
Heterodyne and adaptive phase measurements on states of fixed mean photon number
The standard technique for measuring the phase of a single mode field is
heterodyne detection. Such a measurement may have an uncertainty far above the
intrinsic quantum phase uncertainty of the state. Recently it has been shown
[H. M. Wiseman and R. B. Killip, Phys. Rev. A 57, 2169 (1998)] that an adaptive
technique introduces far less excess noise. Here we quantify this difference by
an exact numerical calculation of the minimum measured phase variance for the
various schemes, optimized over states with a fixed mean photon number. We also
analytically derive the asymptotics for these variances. For the case of
heterodyne detection our results disagree with the power law claimed by
D'Ariano and Paris [Phys. Rev. A 49, 3022 (1994)].Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures, minor changes from journal versio
State and dynamical parameter estimation for open quantum systems
Following the evolution of an open quantum system requires full knowledge of
its dynamics. In this paper we consider open quantum systems for which the
Hamiltonian is ``uncertain''. In particular, we treat in detail a simple system
similar to that considered by Mabuchi [Quant. Semiclass. Opt. 8, 1103 (1996)]:
a radiatively damped atom driven by an unknown Rabi frequency (as
would occur for an atom at an unknown point in a standing light wave). By
measuring the environment of the system, knowledge about the system state, and
about the uncertain dynamical parameter, can be acquired. We find that these
two sorts of knowledge acquisition (quantified by the posterior distribution
for , and the conditional purity of the system, respectively) are quite
distinct processes, which are not strongly correlated. Also, the quality and
quantity of knowledge gain depend strongly on the type of monitoring scheme. We
compare five different detection schemes (direct, adaptive, homodyne of the
quadrature, homodyne of the quadrature, and heterodyne) using four
different measures of the knowledge gain (Shannon information about ,
variance in , long-time system purity, and short-time system purity).Comment: 14 pages, 18 figure
Phase measurements at the theoretical limit
It is well known that the result of any phase measurement on an optical mode
made using linear optics has an introduced uncertainty in addition to the
intrinsic quantum phase uncertainty of the state of the mode. The best
previously published technique [H. M. Wiseman and R.B. Killip, Phys. Rev. A 57,
2169 (1998)] is an adaptive technique that introduces a phase variance that
scales as n^{-1.5}, where n is the mean photon number of the state. This is far
above the minimum intrinsic quantum phase variance of the state, which scales
as n^{-2}. It has been shown that a lower limit to the phase variance that is
introduced scales as ln(n)/n^2. Here we introduce an adaptive technique that
attains this theoretical lower limit.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, updated with better feedback schem
Adaptive Optical Phase Estimation Using Time-Symmetric Quantum Smoothing
Quantum parameter estimation has many applications, from gravitational wave
detection to quantum key distribution. We present the first experimental
demonstration of the time-symmetric technique of quantum smoothing. We consider
both adaptive and non-adaptive quantum smoothing, and show that both are better
than their well-known time-asymmetric counterparts (quantum filtering). For the
problem of estimating a stochastically varying phase shift on a coherent beam,
our theory predicts that adaptive quantum smoothing (the best scheme) gives an
estimate with a mean-square error up to times smaller than that
from non-adaptive quantum filtering (the standard quantum limit). The
experimentally measured improvement is
Quantum optical waveform conversion
Currently proposed architectures for long-distance quantum communication rely
on networks of quantum processors connected by optical communications channels
[1,2]. The key resource for such networks is the entanglement of matter-based
quantum systems with quantum optical fields for information transmission. The
optical interaction bandwidth of these material systems is a tiny fraction of
that available for optical communication, and the temporal shape of the quantum
optical output pulse is often poorly suited for long-distance transmission.
Here we demonstrate that nonlinear mixing of a quantum light pulse with a
spectrally tailored classical field can compress the quantum pulse by more than
a factor of 100 and flexibly reshape its temporal waveform, while preserving
all quantum properties, including entanglement. Waveform conversion can be used
with heralded arrays of quantum light emitters to enable quantum communication
at the full data rate of optical telecommunications.Comment: submitte
In-loop squeezing is real squeezing to an in-loop atom
Electro-optical feedback can produce an in-loop photocurrent with arbitrarily
low noise. This is not regarded as evidence of `real' squeezing because
squeezed light cannot be extracted from the loop using a linear beam splitter.
Here I show that illuminating an atom (which is a nonlinear optical element)
with `in-loop' squeezed light causes line-narrowing of one quadrature of the
atom's fluorescence. This has long been regarded as an effect which can only be
produced by squeezing. Experiments on atoms using in-loop squeezing should be
much easier than those with conventional sources of squeezed light.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, submitted to PR
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