5 research outputs found

    Enhancing nonclassical bosonic correlations in a quantum walk network through experimental control of disorder

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    The presence of disorder and inhomogeneities in quantum networks has often been unexpectedly beneficial for both quantum and classical resources. Here we experimentally realize a controllable inhomogenous quantum walk (QW) dynamics, which can be exploited to investigate the effect of coherent disorder on the quantum correlations between two indistinguishable photons. Through the imposition of suitable disorder configurations, we observe two-photon states that exhibit an enhancement in the quantum correlations between two selected modes of the network, compared to the case of an ordered QW. Different configurations of disorder can steer the system toward different realizations of such an enhancement, thus allowing spatial and temporal manipulation of quantum correlations between remote modes of QW networks

    Witnessing non-Markovian effects of quantum processes through Hilbert-Schmidt speed

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    Non-Markovian effects can speed up the dynamics of quantum systems while the limits of the evolution time can be derived by quantifiers of quantum statistical speed. We introduce a witness for characterizing the non-Markovianity of quantum evolutions through the Hilbert-Schmidt speed (HSS), which is a special type of quantum statistical speed. This witness has the advantage of not requiring diagonalization of the evolved density matrix. Its sensitivity is investigated by considering several paradigmatic instances of open quantum systems, such as one qubit subject to phase-covariant noise and a Pauli channel, two independent qubits locally interacting with leaky cavities, and V-type and Lambda-type three-level atoms (qutrits) in a dissipative cavity. We show that the proposed HSS-based non-Markovianity witness detects memory effects, in agreement with the well-established trace-distance-based witness, being sensitive to system-environment information backflows

    Memory Effects in High-Dimensional Systems Faithfully Identified by Hilbert\u2013Schmidt Speed-Based Witness

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    A witness of non-Markovianity based on the Hilbert\u2013Schmidt speed (HSS), a special type of quantum statistical speed, has been recently introduced for low-dimensional quantum systems. Such a non-Markovianity witness is particularly useful, being easily computable since no diagonalization of the system density matrix is required. We investigate the sensitivity of this HSS-based witness to detect non-Markovianity in various high-dimensional and multipartite open quantum systems with finite Hilbert spaces. We find that the time behaviors of the HSS-based witness are always in agreement with those of quantum negativity or quantum correlation measure. These results show that the HSS-based witness is a faithful identifier of the memory effects appearing in the quantum evolution of a high-dimensional system with a finite Hilbert space

    Readout of quantum information spreading using a disordered quantum walk

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    We design a quantum probing protocol using quantum walks to investigate the quantum information spreading pattern. We employ quantum Fisher information as a figure of merit to quantify extractable information about an unknown parameter encoded within the quantum walk evolution. Although the approach is universal, we focus on the coherent static and dynamic disorder to investigate anomalous and classical transport as well as Anderson localization. We provide a feasible experimental strategy to implement, in principle, the quantum probing protocol based on the quantum Fisher information using a Mach-Zehnder-like interferometric setup. Our results show that a quantum walk can be considered as a readout device of information about defects and perturbations occurring in complex networks, both classical and quantum
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