815 research outputs found
Solving the liar detection problem using the four-qubit singlet state
A method for solving the Byzantine agreement problem [M. Fitzi, N. Gisin, and
U. Maurer, Phys. Rev. Lett. 87, 217901 (2001)] and the liar detection problem
[A. Cabello, Phys. Rev. Lett. 89, 100402 (2002)] is introduced. The main
advantages of this protocol are that it is simpler and is based on a four-qubit
singlet state already prepared in the laboratory.Comment: REVTeX4, 4 page
Enhanced Quantum Estimation via Purification
We analyze the estimation of a finite ensemble of quantum bits which have
been sent through a depolarizing channel. Instead of using the depolarized
qubits directly, we first apply a purification step and show that this improves
the fidelity of subsequent quantum estimation. Even though we lose some qubits
of our finite ensemble the information is concentrated in the remaining
purified ones.Comment: 6 pages, including 3 figure
Appearance and Stability of Anomalously Fluctuating States in Shor's Factoring Algorithm
We analyze quantum computers which perform Shor's factoring algorithm, paying
attention to asymptotic properties as the number L of qubits is increased.
Using numerical simulations and a general theory of the stabilities of
many-body quantum states, we show the following: Anomalously fluctuating states
(AFSs), which have anomalously large fluctuations of additive operators, appear
in various stages of the computation. For large L, they decohere at anomalously
great rates by weak noises that simulate noises in real systems. Decoherence of
some of the AFSs is fatal to the results of the computation, whereas
decoherence of some of the other AFSs does not have strong influence on the
results of the computation. When such a crucial AFS decoheres, the probability
of getting the correct computational result is reduced approximately
proportional to L^2. The reduction thus becomes anomalously large with
increasing L, even when the coupling constant to the noise is rather small.
Therefore, quantum computations should be improved in such a way that all AFSs
appearing in the algorithms do not decohere at such great rates in the existing
noises.Comment: 11 figures. A few discussions were added in verion 2. Version 3 is
the SAME as version 2; only errors during the Web-upload were fixed. Version
4 is the publised version, in which several typos are fixed and the reference
list is update
Protecting Quantum Information Encoded in Decoherence Free States Against Exchange Errors
The exchange interaction between identical qubits in a quantum information
processor gives rise to unitary two-qubit errors. It is shown here that
decoherence free subspaces (DFSs) for collective decoherence undergo Pauli
errors under exchange, which however do not take the decoherence free states
outside of the DFS. In order to protect DFSs against these errors it is
sufficient to employ a recently proposed concatenated DFS-quantum error
correcting code scheme [D.A. Lidar, D. Bacon and K.B. Whaley, Phys. Rev. Lett.
{\bf 82}, 4556 (1999)].Comment: 7 pages, no figures. Discussion in section V.A. significantly
expanded. Several small changes. Two authors adde
Quantum Gambling Using Two Nonorthogonal States
We give a (remote) quantum gambling scheme that makes use of the fact that
quantum nonorthogonal states cannot be distinguished with certainty. In the
proposed scheme, two participants Alice and Bob can be regarded as playing a
game of making guesses on identities of quantum states that are in one of two
given nonorthogonal states: if Bob makes a correct (an incorrect) guess on the
identity of a quantum state that Alice has sent, he wins (loses). It is shown
that the proposed scheme is secure against the nonentanglement attack. It can
also be shown heuristically that the scheme is secure in the case of the
entanglement attack.Comment: no essential correction, 4 pages, RevTe
Noise-assisted preparation of entangled atoms
We discuss the generation of entangled states of two two-level atoms inside
an optical cavity. The cavity mode is supposed to be coupled to a white noise
with adjustable intensity. We describe how the entanglement between the atoms
inside the cavity arise in such a situation. The entanglement is maximized for
intermediate values of the noise intensity, while it is a monotonic function of
the spontaneous rate. This resembles the phenomenon of stochastic resonance and
sheds more light on the idea to exploit white noise in quantum information
processing.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Qubit Disentanglement and Decoherence via Dephasing
We consider whether quantum coherence in the form of mutual entanglement
between a pair of qubits is susceptible to decay that may be more rapid than
the decay of the coherence of either qubit individually. An instance of
potential importance for solid state quantum computing arises if embedded
qubits (spins, quantum dots, Cooper pair boxes, etc.) are exposed to global and
local noise at the same time. Here we allow separate phase-noisy channels to
affect local and non-local measures of system coherence. We find that the time
for decay of the qubit entanglement can be significantly shorter than the time
for local dephasing of the individual qubits.Comment: REVTeX, 9 pages, 1 figure, v2 with minor changes, reference adde
Entangled state preparation via dissipation-assisted adiabatic passages
The main obstacle for coherent control of open quantum systems is decoherence
due to different dissipation channels and the inability to precisely control
experimental parameters. To overcome these problems we propose to use
dissipation-assisted adiabatic passages. These are relatively fast processes
where the presence of spontaneous decay rates corrects for errors due to
non-adiabaticity while the system remains in a decoherence-free state and
behaves as predicted for an adiabatic passage. As a concrete example we present
a scheme to entangle atoms by moving them in and out of an optical cavity.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, minor changes, accepted for publication in Phys.
Rev.
Suppression of decoherence in quantum registers by entanglement with a nonequilibrium environment
It is shown that a nonequilibrium environment can be instrumental in
suppressing decoherence between distinct decoherence free subspaces in quantum
registers. The effect is found in the framework of exact coherent-product
solutions for model registers decohering in a bath of degenerate harmonic
modes, through couplings linear in bath coordinates. These solutions represent
a natural nonequilibrium extension of the standard solution for a decoupled
initial register state and a thermal environment. Under appropriate conditions,
the corresponding reduced register distribution can propagate in an unperturbed
manner, even in the presence of entanglement between states belonging to
distinct decoherence free subspaces, and despite persistent bath entanglement.
As a byproduct, we also obtain a refined picture of coherence dynamics under
bang-bang decoherence control. In particular, it is shown that each
radio-frequency pulse in a typical bang-bang cycle induces a revival of
coherence, and that these revivals are exploited in a natural way by the
time-symmetrized version of the bang-bang protocol.Comment: RevTex3, 26 pgs., 2 figs.. This seriously expanded version accepted
by Phys.Rev.A. No fundamentally new content, but rewritten introduction to
problem, self-contained introduction of thermal coherent-product states in
standard operator formalism, examples of zero-temperature decoherence free
Davydov states. Also fixed a typo that propagated into an interpretational
blunder in old Sec.3 [fortunately of no consequence
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