186 research outputs found
Increasing efficiency of a linear-optical quantum gate using an electronic feed forward
We have successfully used a fast electronic feed forward to increase the
success probability of a linear optical implementation of a programmable phase
gate from 25% to its theoretical limit of 50%. The feed forward applies a
conditional unitary operation which changes the incorrect output states of the
data qubit to the correct ones. The gate itself rotates an arbitrary quantum
state of the data qubit around the z-axis of the Bloch sphere with the angle of
rotation being fully determined by the state of the program qubit. The gate
implementation is based on fiber optics components. Qubits are encoded into
spatial modes of single photons. The signal from the feed-forward detector is
led directly to a phase modulator using only a passive voltage divider. We have
verified the increase of the success probability and characterized the gate
operation by means of quantum process tomography. We have demonstrated that the
use of the feed forward does not affect either the process fidelity or the
output-state fidelities
The algebra of adjacency patterns: Rees matrix semigroups with reversion
We establish a surprisingly close relationship between universal Horn classes
of directed graphs and varieties generated by so-called adjacency semigroups
which are Rees matrix semigroups over the trivial group with the unary
operation of reversion. In particular, the lattice of subvarieties of the
variety generated by adjacency semigroups that are regular unary semigroups is
essentially the same as the lattice of universal Horn classes of reflexive
directed graphs. A number of examples follow, including a limit variety of
regular unary semigroups and finite unary semigroups with NP-hard variety
membership problems.Comment: 30 pages, 9 figure
Deterministic superresolution with coherent states at the shot noise limit
Interference of light fields plays an important role in various
high-precision measurement schemes. It has been shown that super resolving
phase measurements beyond the standard coherent state limit can be obtained
either by using maximally entangled multi-particle states of light or using
complex detection approaches. Here we show that super resolving phase
measurements at the shot noise limit can be achieved without resorting to
non-classical optical states or to low-efficiency detection processes. Using
robust coherent states of light, high-efficiency homodyne detection and a
deterministic binarization processing technique, we show a narrowing of the
interference fringes that scales with 1/Sqrt{N} where N is the mean number of
photons of the coherent state. Experimentally we demonstrate a 12-fold
narrowing at the shot noise limit.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
A classification of bisymmetric polynomial functions over integral domains of characteristic zero
We describe the class of n-variable polynomial functions that satisfy
Acz\'el's bisymmetry property over an arbitrary integral domain of
characteristic zero with identity
Optimal discrimination of mixed quantum states involving inconclusive results
We propose a generalized discrimination scheme for mixed quantum states. In
the present scenario we allow for certain fixed fraction of inconclusive
results and we maximize the success rate of the quantum-state discrimination.
This protocol interpolates between the Ivanovic-Dieks-Peres scheme and the
Helstrom one. We formulate the extremal equations for the optimal positive
operator valued measure describing the discrimination device and establish a
criterion for its optimality. We also devise a numerical method for efficient
solving of these extremal equations.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figur
Reconstruction of superoperators from incomplete measurements
We present strategies how to reconstruct (estimate) properties of a quantum
channel described by the map E based on incomplete measurements. In a
particular case of a qubit channel a complete reconstruction of the map E can
be performed via complete tomography of four output states E[rho_j ] that
originate from a set of four linearly independent test states j (j = 1, 2, 3,
4) at the input of the channel. We study the situation when less than four
linearly independent states are transmitted via the channel and measured at the
output. We present strategies how to reconstruct the channel when just one, two
or three states are transmitted via the channel. In particular, we show that if
just one state is transmitted via the channel then the best reconstruction can
be achieved when this state is a total mixture described by the density
operator rho = I/2. To improve the reconstruction procedure one has to send via
the channel more states. The best strategy is to complement the total mixture
with pure states that are mutually orthogonal in the sense of the Bloch-sphere
representation. We show that unitary transformations (channels) can be uniquely
reconstructed (determined) based on the information of how three properly
chosen input states are transformed under the action of the channel.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figure
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