29 research outputs found
Investigation of nonlocal information as condition for violations of Bell inequality and information causality
On the basis of local realism theory, nonlocal information is necessary for
violation of Bell's inequality. From a theoretical point of view, nonlocal
information is essentially the mutual information on distant outcome and
measurement setting. In this work we prove that if the measurement is free and
unbiased, the mutual information about the distant outcome and setting is both
necessary for the violation of Bell's inequality in the case with unbiased
marginal probabilities. In the case with biased marginal probabilities, we
point out that the mutual information about distant outcome cease to be
necessary for violation of Bell's inequality, while the mutual information
about distant measurement settings is still required. We also prove that the
mutual information about distant measurement settings must be contained in the
transmitted messages due to the freedom of measurement choices. Finally we
point out that the mutual information about both distant outcome and
measurement settings are necessary for a violation of information causality.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, big change, version as close as possible to the
published version in Eur. Phys. J.
Analysis of Generalized Grover's Quantum Search Algorithms Using Recursion Equations
The recursion equation analysis of Grover's quantum search algorithm
presented by Biham et al. [PRA 60, 2742 (1999)] is generalized. It is applied
to the large class of Grover's type algorithms in which the Hadamard transform
is replaced by any other unitary transformation and the phase inversion is
replaced by a rotation by an arbitrary angle. The time evolution of the
amplitudes of the marked and unmarked states, for any initial complex amplitude
distribution is expressed using first order linear difference equations. These
equations are solved exactly. The solution provides the number of iterations T
after which the probability of finding a marked state upon measurement is the
highest, as well as the value of this probability, P_max. Both T and P_max are
found to depend on the averages and variances of the initial amplitude
distributions of the marked and unmarked states, but not on higher moments.Comment: 8 pages, no figures. To appear in Phys. Rev.
Quantum state merging and negative information
We consider a quantum state shared between many distant locations, and define
a quantum information processing primitive, state merging, that optimally
merges the state into one location. As announced in [Horodecki, Oppenheim,
Winter, Nature 436, 673 (2005)], the optimal entanglement cost of this task is
the conditional entropy if classical communication is free. Since this quantity
can be negative, and the state merging rate measures partial quantum
information, we find that quantum information can be negative. The classical
communication rate also has a minimum rate: a certain quantum mutual
information. State merging enabled one to solve a number of open problems:
distributed quantum data compression, quantum coding with side information at
the decoder and sender, multi-party entanglement of assistance, and the
capacity of the quantum multiple access channel. It also provides an
operational proof of strong subadditivity. Here, we give precise definitions
and prove these results rigorously.Comment: 23 pages, 3 figure
Diagnostic yield of next-generation sequencing in very early-onset inflammatory bowel diseases: a multicenter study (vol 12, pg 1104, 2021)
Transplantation and immunomodulatio