55 research outputs found
Theory of Quantum Pulse Position Modulation and Related Numerical Problems
The paper deals with quantum pulse position modulation (PPM), both in the
absence (pure states) and in the presence (mixed states) of thermal noise,
using the Glauber representation of coherent laser radiation. The objective is
to find optimal (or suboptimal) measurement operators and to evaluate the
corresponding error probability. For PPM, the correct formulation of quantum
states is given by the tensorial product of m identical Hilbert spaces, where m
is the PPM order. The presence of mixed states, due to thermal noise, generates
an optimization problem involving matrices of huge dimensions, which already
for 4-PPM, are of the order of ten thousand. To overcome this computational
complexity, the currently available methods of quantum detection, which are
based on explicit results, convex linear programming and square root
measurement, are compared to find the computationally less expensive one. In
this paper a fundamental role is played by the geometrically uniform symmetry
of the quantum PPM format. The evaluation of error probability confirms the
vast superiority of the quantum detection over its classical counterpart.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in IEEE Trans. on
Communication
Entanglement-enhanced testing of multiple quantum hypotheses
Quantum hypothesis testing has been greatly advanced for the binary discrimination of two states, or two channels. In this setting, we already know that quantum entanglement can be used to enhance the discrimination of two bosonic channels. Here, we remove the restriction of binary hypotheses and show that entangled photons can remarkably boost the discrimination of multiple bosonic channels. More precisely, we formulate a general problem of channel-position finding where the goal is to determine the position of a target channel among many background channels. We prove that, using entangled photons at the input and a generalized form of conditional nulling receiver at the output, we may outperform any classical strategy. Our results can be applied to enhance a range of technological tasks, including the optical readout of sparse classical data, the spectroscopic analysis of a frequency spectrum, and the determination of the direction of a target at fixed range
Implementation of Two-Mode Gaussian States Whose Covariance Matrix Has the Standard Form
This paper deals with the covariance matrix (CM) of two-mode Gaussian states, which, together with the mean vector, fully describes these states. In the two-mode states, the (ordinary) CM is a real symmetric matrix of order 4; therefore, it depends on 10 real variables. However, there is a very efficient representation of the CM called the standard form (SF) that reduces the degrees of freedom to four real variables, while preserving all the relevant information on the state. The SF can be easily evaluated using a set of symplectic invariants. The paper starts from the SF, introducing an architecture that implements with primitive components the given two-mode Gaussian state having the CM with the SF. The architecture consists of a beam splitter, followed by the parallel set of two single-mode real squeezers, followed by another beam splitter. The advantage of this architecture is that it gives a precise non-redundant physical meaning of the generation of the Gaussian state. Essentially, all the relevant information is contained in this simple architecture
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