288 research outputs found
Optimal continuous-variable teleportation under energy constraint
Quantum teleportation is one of the crucial protocols in quantum information
processing. It is important to accomplish an efficient teleportation under
practical conditions, aiming at a higher fidelity desirably using fewer
resources. The continuous-variable (CV) version of quantum teleportation was
first proposed using a Gaussian state as a quantum resource, while other
attempts were also made to improve performance by applying non-Gaussian
operations. We investigate the CV teleportation to find its ultimate fidelity
under energy constraint identifying an optimal quantum state. For this purpose,
we present a formalism to evaluate teleportation fidelity as an expectation
value of an operator. Using this formalism, we prove that the optimal state
must be a form of photon-number entangled states. We further show that Gaussian
states are near-optimal while non-Gaussian states make a slight improvement and
therefore are rigorously optimal, particularly in the low-energy regime.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, published versio
Transmutation of obect
This thesis is the result of years studying art and design. I felt fortunate to be introduced to glass during the past two years. I spent most of the first year developing ideas, exploring process and avoiding functional and pragmatic issues. Those are important elements for designing an object but thinking about my own unique approach was more important. The other goal of the first year was gaining experience with glass as a new material. Before I started my second year, I recognized concepts that had been recurring in my works for the past few years. I found an inseparable relationship with vessels not as historical objects nor as artistic ones but as daily objects, which are functional and artistic enough for everyday enjoyment. Vessels are daily objects that have a long history that is parallel with human history. They have a variety of values. Some of them are unimaginably fascinating and some are very ordinary. Even though most vessels, like plates, cups, vases and glasses in our homes are not valuable as historical antiques or famous design brands, they are important in our lives. To me, reviewing these objects is thinking back through my life and studying human history. As a sculptor who was a ceramic product designer and potter, I wanted to carefully reconsider humanity through vessels as humble objects. I have attempted to visually display my meditative thoughts through these sculptures that are transposing existence. Through this method I could consider the concept more. Most of the objects I have used in my exhibition were ordinary totally touchable things but by transposing their existences they became untouchable or unusable objects. This main purpose is primarily visual
Generating arbitrary photon-number entangled states for continuous-variable quantum informatics
We propose two experimental schemes that can produce an arbitrary
photon-number entangled state (PNES) in a finite dimension. This class of
entangled states naturally includes non-Gaussian continuous-variable (CV)
states that may provide some practical advantages over the Gaussian
counterparts (two-mode squeezed states). We particularly compare the
entanglement characteristics of the Gaussian and the non-Gaussian states in
view of the degree of entanglement and the Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen correlation,
and further discuss their applications to the CV teleportation and the
nonlocality test. The experimental imperfection due to the on-off
photodetectors with nonideal efficiency is also considered in our analysis to
show the feasibility of our schemes within existing technologies.Comment: published version, 13 pages, 7 figure
Gaussian benchmark for optical communication aiming towards ultimate capacity
We establish the fundamental limit of communication capacity within Gaussian
schemes under phase-insensitive Gaussian channels, which employ multimode
Gaussian states for encoding and collective Gaussian operations and
measurements for decoding. We prove that this Gaussian capacity is additive,
i.e., its upper bound occurs with separable encoding and separable receivers so
that a single-mode communication suffices to achieve the largest capacity under
Gaussian schemes. This rigorously characterizes the gap between the ultimate
Holevo capacity and the capacity within Gaussian communication, showing that
Gaussian regime is not sufficient to achieve the Holevo bound particularly in
the low-photon regime. Furthermore the Gaussian benchmark established here can
be used to critically assess the performance of non-Gaussian protocols for
optical communication. We move on to identify non-Gaussian schemes to beat the
Gaussian capacity and show that a non-Gaussian receiver recently implemented by
Becerra et al. [Nat. Photon. 7, 147 (2013)] can achieve this aim with an
appropriately chosen encoding strategy.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, with supplemental materia
Continuous-variable dense coding via a general Gaussian state: Monogamy relation
We study a continuous variable (CV) dense-coding protocol, originally
proposed to employ a two-mode squeezed state, using a general two-mode Gaussian
state as a quantum channel. We particularly obtain conditions to manifest
quantum advantage by beating two well-known single-mode schemes, namely, the
squeezed-state scheme (best Gaussian scheme) and the number-state scheme
(optimal scheme achieving the Holevo bound). We then extend our study to a
multipartite Gaussian state and investigate the monogamy of operational
entanglement measured by the communication capacity under the dense-coding
protocol. We show that this operational entanglement represents a strict
monogamy relation, by means of Heisenberg's uncertainty principle among
different parties, i.e., the quantum advantage for communication can be
possible for only one pair of two-mode systems among many parties
Single-photon quantum nonlocality: Violation of the Clauser-Horne-Shimony-Holt inequality using feasible measurement setups
We investigate quantum nonlocality of a single-photon entangled state under
feasible measurement techniques consisting of on-off and homodyne detections
along with unitary operations of displacement and squeezing. We test for a
potential violation of the Clauser-Horne-Shimony-Holt (CHSH) inequality, in
which each of the bipartite party has a freedom to choose between 2 measurement
settings, each measurement yielding a binary outcome. We find that
single-photon quantum nonlocality can be detected when two or less of the 4
total measurements are carried out by homodyne detection. The largest violation
of the CHSH inequality is obtained when all four measurements are
squeezed-and-displaced on-off detections. We test robustness of violations
against imperfections in on-off detectors and single-photon sources, finding
that the squeezed-and-displaced measurement schemes perform better than the
displacement-only measurement schemes.Comment: 7+ pages, 7 figures, 1 table, close to published versio
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