526 research outputs found
Error Exponents for Variable-length Block Codes with Feedback and Cost Constraints
Variable-length block-coding schemes are investigated for discrete memoryless
channels with ideal feedback under cost constraints. Upper and lower bounds are
found for the minimum achievable probability of decoding error as
a function of constraints R, \AV, and on the transmission rate,
average cost, and average block length respectively. For given and \AV,
the lower and upper bounds to the exponent are
asymptotically equal as . The resulting reliability
function, , as a
function of and \AV, is concave in the pair (R, \AV) and generalizes
the linear reliability function of Burnashev to include cost constraints. The
results are generalized to a class of discrete-time memoryless channels with
arbitrary alphabets, including additive Gaussian noise channels with amplitude
and power constraints
Quantum Belief Propagation
We present an accurate numerical algorithm, called quantum belief propagation
(QBP), for simulation of one-dimensional quantum systems at non-zero
temperature. The algorithm exploits the fact that quantum effects are
short-range in these systems at non-zero temperature, decaying on a length
scale inversely proportional to the temperature. We compare to exact results on
a spin-1/2 Heisenberg chain. Even a very modest calculation, requiring
diagonalizing only 10-by-10 matrices, reproduces the peak susceptibility with a
relative error of less than , while more elaborate calculations
further reduce the error.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure; revised time estimates due to improved
implementation. Typographical corrections to Eq. 7 made; thanks to David
Poulin for pointing out the mistak
Classical capacity of bosonic broadcast communication and a new minimum output entropy conjecture
Previous work on the classical information capacities of bosonic channels has
established the capacity of the single-user pure-loss channel, bounded the
capacity of the single-user thermal-noise channel, and bounded the capacity
region of the multiple-access channel. The latter is a multi-user scenario in
which several transmitters seek to simultaneously and independently communicate
to a single receiver. We study the capacity region of the bosonic broadcast
channel, in which a single transmitter seeks to simultaneously and
independently communicate to two different receivers. It is known that the
tightest available lower bound on the capacity of the single-user thermal-noise
channel is that channel's capacity if, as conjectured, the minimum von Neumann
entropy at the output of a bosonic channel with additive thermal noise occurs
for coherent-state inputs. Evidence in support of this minimum output entropy
conjecture has been accumulated, but a rigorous proof has not been obtained. In
this paper, we propose a new minimum output entropy conjecture that, if proved
to be correct, will establish that the capacity region of the bosonic broadcast
channel equals the inner bound achieved using a coherent-state encoding and
optimum detection. We provide some evidence that supports this new conjecture,
but again a full proof is not available.Comment: 13 pages, 7 figure
Processing and Transmission of Information
Contains reports on two research projects.National Science Foundation (Grant GP-2495)National Institutes of Health (Grant MH-04737-04)National Aeronautics and Space Administration (Grant NsG-334)National Aeronautics and Space Administration (Grant NsG-496
Loop Calculus in Statistical Physics and Information Science
Considering a discrete and finite statistical model of a general position we
introduce an exact expression for the partition function in terms of a finite
series. The leading term in the series is the Bethe-Peierls (Belief
Propagation)-BP contribution, the rest are expressed as loop-contributions on
the factor graph and calculated directly using the BP solution. The series
unveils a small parameter that often makes the BP approximation so successful.
Applications of the loop calculus in statistical physics and information
science are discussed.Comment: 4 pages, submitted to Phys.Rev.Lett. Changes: More general model,
Simpler derivatio
Memory effects in attenuation and amplification quantum processes
With increasing communication rates via quantum channels, memory effects
become unavoidable whenever the use rate of the channel is comparable to the
typical relaxation time of the channel environment. We introduce a model of a
bosonic memory channel, describing correlated noise effects in quantum-optical
processes via attenuating or amplifying media. To study such a channel model,
we make use of a proper set of collective field variables, which allows us to
unravel the memory effects, mapping the n-fold concatenation of the memory
channel to a unitarily equivalent, direct product of n single-mode bosonic
channels. We hence estimate the channel capacities by relying on known results
for the memoryless setting. Our findings show that the model is characterized
by two different regimes, in which the cross correlations induced by the noise
among different channel uses are either exponentially enhanced or exponentially
reduced.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures, close to the published versio
Finite-Connectivity Spin-Glass Phase Diagrams and Low Density Parity Check Codes
We obtain phase diagrams of regular and irregular finite connectivity
spin-glasses. Contact is firstly established between properties of the phase
diagram and the performances of low density parity check codes (LDPC) within
the Replica Symmetric (RS) ansatz. We then study the location of the dynamical
and critical transition of these systems within the one step Replica Symmetry
Breaking theory (RSB), extending similar calculations that have been performed
in the past for the Bethe spin-glass problem. We observe that, away from the
Nishimori line, in the low temperature region, the location of the dynamical
transition line does change within the RSB theory, in comparison with the (RS)
case. For LDPC decoding over the binary erasure channel we find, at zero
temperature and rate R=1/4 an RS critical transition point located at p_c =
0.67 while the critical RSB transition point is located at p_c = 0.7450, to be
compared with the corresponding Shannon bound 1-R. For the binary symmetric
channel (BSC) we show that the low temperature reentrant behavior of the
dynamical transition line, observed within the RS ansatz, changes within the
RSB theory; the location of the dynamical transition point occurring at higher
values of the channel noise. Possible practical implications to improve the
performances of the state-of-the-art error correcting codes are discussed.Comment: 21 pages, 15 figure
Small-world hypergraphs on a bond-disordered Bethe lattice
We study the thermodynamic properties of spin systems with bond-disorder on
small-world hypergraphs, obtained by superimposing a one-dimensional Ising
chain onto a random Bethe graph with p-spin interactions. Using transfer-matrix
techniques, we derive fixed-point equations describing the relevant order
parameters and the free energy, both in the replica symmetric and one step
replica symmetry breaking approximation. We determine the static and dynamic
ferromagnetic transition and the spinglass transition within replica symmetry
for all temperatures, and demonstrate corrections to these results when one
step replica symmetry breaking is taken into account. The results obtained are
in agreement with Monte-Carlo simulations.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure
Optimal ratio between phase basis and bit basis in QKD
In the original BB84 protocol, the bit basis and the phase basis are used
with equal probability. Lo et al (J. of Cryptology, 18, 133-165 (2005))
proposed to modify the ratio between the two bases by increasing the final key
generation rate. However, the optimum ratio has not been derived. In this
letter, in order to examine this problem, the ratio between the two bases is
optimized for exponential constraints given Eve's information
distinguishability and the final error probability
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