65 research outputs found
Teleportation fidelities of squeezed states from thermodynamical state space measures.
Published versio
Entanglement Typicality
We provide a summary of both seminal and recent results on typical
entanglement. By typical values of entanglement, we refer here to values of
entanglement quantifiers that (given a reasonable measure on the manifold of
states) appear with arbitrarily high probability for quantum systems of
sufficiently high dimensionality. We work within the Haar measure framework for
discrete quantum variables, where we report on results concerning the average
von Neumann and linear entropies as well as arguments implying the typicality
of such values in the asymptotic limit. We then proceed to discuss the
generation of typical quantum states with random circuitry. Different phases of
entanglement, and the connection between typical entanglement and
thermodynamics are discussed. We also cover approaches to measures on the
non-compact set of Gaussian states of continuous variable quantum systems.Comment: Review paper with two quotes and minimalist figure
The work value of information
We present quantitative relations between work and information that are valid
both for finite sized and internally correlated systems as well in the
thermodynamical limit. We suggest work extraction should be viewed as a game
where the amount of work an agent can extract depends on how well it can guess
the micro-state of the system. In general it depends both on the agent's
knowledge and risk-tolerance, because the agent can bet on facts that are not
certain and thereby risk failure of the work extraction. We derive strikingly
simple expressions for the extractable work in the extreme cases of effectively
zero- and arbitrary risk tolerance respectively, thereby enveloping all cases.
Our derivation makes a connection between heat engines and the smooth entropy
approach. The latter has recently extended Shannon theory to encompass finite
sized and internally correlated bit strings, and our analysis points the way to
an analogous extension of statistical mechanics.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
A measure of majorisation emerging from single-shot statistical mechanics
The use of the von Neumann entropy in formulating the laws of thermodynamics
has recently been challenged. It is associated with the average work whereas
the work guaranteed to be extracted in any single run of an experiment is the
more interesting quantity in general. We show that an expression that
quantifies majorisation determines the optimal guaranteed work. We argue it
should therefore be the central quantity of statistical mechanics, rather than
the von Neumann entropy. In the limit of many identical and independent
subsystems (asymptotic i.i.d) the von Neumann entropy expressions are recovered
but in the non-equilbrium regime the optimal guaranteed work can be radically
different to the optimal average. Moreover our measure of majorisation governs
which evolutions can be realized via thermal interactions, whereas the
nondecrease of the von Neumann entropy is not sufficiently restrictive. Our
results are inspired by single-shot information theory.Comment: 54 pages (15+39), 9 figures. Changed title / changed presentation,
same main results / added minor result on pure bipartite state entanglement
(appendix G) / near to published versio
- …