80 research outputs found
The theory of manipulations of pure state asymmetry: basic tools and equivalence classes of states under symmetric operations
If a system undergoes symmetric dynamics, then the final state of the system
can only break the symmetry in ways in which it was broken by the initial
state, and its measure of asymmetry can be no greater than that of the initial
state. It follows that for the purpose of understanding the consequences of
symmetries of dynamics, in particular, complicated and open-system dynamics, it
is useful to introduce the notion of a state's asymmetry properties, which
includes the type and measure of its asymmetry. We demonstrate and exploit the
fact that the asymmetry properties of a state can also be understood in terms
of information-theoretic concepts, for instance in terms of the state's ability
to encode information about an element of the symmetry group. We show that the
asymmetry properties of a pure state psi relative to the symmetry group G are
completely specified by the characteristic function of the state, defined as
chi_psi(g)= where g\in G and U is the unitary representation of
interest. For a symmetry described by a compact Lie group G, we show that two
pure states can be reversibly interconverted one to the other by symmetric
operations if and only if their characteristic functions are equal up to a
1-dimensional representation of the group. Characteristic functions also allow
us to easily identify the conditions for one pure state to be converted to
another by symmetric operations (in general irreversibly) for the various
paradigms of single-copy transformations: deterministic, state-to-ensemble,
stochastic and catalyzed.Comment: Published version. Several new results added. 31 Pages, 3 Figure
The WAY theorem and the quantum resource theory of asymmetry
The WAY theorem establishes an important constraint that conservation laws
impose on quantum mechanical measurements. We formulate the WAY theorem in the
broader context of resource theories, where one is constrained to a subset of
quantum mechanical operations described by a symmetry group. Establishing
connections with the theory of quantum state discrimination we obtain optimal
unitaries describing the measurement of arbitrary observables, explain how
prior information can permit perfect measurements that circumvent the WAY
constraint, and provide a framework that establishes a natural ordering on
measurement apparatuses through a decomposition into asymmetry and charge
subsystems.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figure
Building all Time Evolutions with Rotationally Invariant Hamiltonians
All elementary Hamiltonians in nature are expected to be invariant under
rotation. Despite this restriction, we usually assume that any arbitrary
measurement or unitary time evolution can be implemented on a physical system,
an assumption whose validity is not obvious. We introduce two different schemes
by which any arbitrary unitary time evolution and measurement can be
implemented with desired accuracy by using rotationally invariant Hamiltonians
that act on the given system and two ancillary systems serving as reference
frames. These frames specify the z and x directions and are independent of the
desired time evolution. We also investigate the effects of quantum fluctuations
that inevitably arise due to usage of a finite system as a reference frame and
estimate how fast these fluctuations tend to zero when the size of the
reference frame tends to infinity. Moreover we prove that for a general
symmetry any symmetric quantum operations can be implemented just by using
symmetric interactions and ancillas in the symmetric states.Comment: 26 pages, 5 figures; V2 published version (Typos corrected, Figures
changed, more discussion about metric
Toward physical realizations of thermodynamic resource theories
Conventional statistical mechanics describes large systems and averages over
many particles or over many trials. But work, heat, and entropy impact the
small scales that experimentalists can increasingly control, e.g., in
single-molecule experiments. The statistical mechanics of small scales has been
quantified with two toolkits developed in quantum information theory: resource
theories and one-shot information theory. The field has boomed recently, but
the theorems amassed have hardly impacted experiments. Can thermodynamic
resource theories be realized experimentally? Via what steps can we shift the
theory toward physical realizations? Should we care? I present eleven
opportunities in physically realizing thermodynamic resource theories.Comment: Publication information added. Cosmetic change
Quantum coherence of steered states
Lying at the heart of quantum mechanics, coherence has recently been studied as a key resource in quantum information theory. Quantum steering, a fundamental notion originally considered by Schrödinger, has also recently received much attention. When Alice and Bob share a correlated quantum system, Alice can perform a local measurement to ‘steer’ Bob’s reduced state. We introduce the maximal steered coherence as a measure describing the extent to which steering can remotely create coherence; more precisely, we find the maximal coherence of Bob’s steered state in the eigenbasis of his original reduced state, where maximization is performed over all positive-operator valued measurements for Alice. We prove that maximal steered coherence vanishes for quantum-classical states whilst reaching a maximum for pure entangled states with full Schmidt rank. Although invariant under local unitary operations, maximal steered coherence may be increased when Bob performs a channel. For a two-qubit state we find that Bob’s channel can increase maximal steered coherence if and only if it is neither unital nor semi-classical, which coincides with the condition for increasing discord. Our results show that the power of steering for coherence generation, though related to discord, is distinct from existing measures of quantum correlation
Non-monotonic population and coherence evolution in Markovian open-system dynamics
We consider a simple microscopic model where the open-system dynamics of a
qubit, despite being Markovian, shows features which are typically associated
to the presence of memory effects. Namely, a non monotonic behavior both in the
population and in the coherence evolution arises due to the presence of
non-secular contributions, which break the phase covariance of the Lindbladian
(semigroup) dynamics. We also show by an explicit construction how such a
non-monotonic behaviour can be reproduced by a phase covariant evolution, but
only at the price of inserting some state-dependent memory effects.Comment: Submitted to the proceedings of the 684. WE-Heraeus-Seminar "Advances
in open systems and fundamental tests of quantum mechanics
Description of quantum coherence in thermodynamic processes requires constraints beyond free energy
Recent studies have developed fundamental limitations on nanoscale thermodynamics, in terms of a set of independent free energy relations. Here we show that free energy relations cannot properly describe quantum coherence in thermodynamic processes. By casting time-asymmetry as a quantifiable, fundamental resource of a quantum state, we arrive at an additional, independent set of thermodynamic constraints that naturally extend the existing ones. These asymmetry relations reveal that the traditional Szilárd engine argument does not extend automatically to quantum coherences, but instead only relational coherences in a multipartite scenario can contribute to thermodynamic work. We find that coherence transformations are always irreversible. Our results also reveal additional structural parallels between thermodynamics and the theory of entanglement
Relativity of quantum states and observables
Under the principle that quantum mechanical observables are invariant under relevant symmetry transformations, we explore how the usual, non-invariant quantities may capture measurement statistics. Using a relativisation mapping, viewed as the incorporation of a quantum reference frame, we show that the usual quantum description approximates the relative one precisely when the reference system admits an appropriate localisable quantity and a localised state. From this follows a new perspective on the nature and reality of quantum superpositions and optical coherence
The sudden change phenomenon of quantum discord
Even if the parameters determining a system's state are varied smoothly, the
behavior of quantum correlations alike to quantum discord, and of its classical
counterparts, can be very peculiar, with the appearance of non-analyticities in
its rate of change. Here we review this sudden change phenomenon (SCP)
discussing some important points related to it: Its uncovering,
interpretations, and experimental verifications, its use in the context of the
emergence of the pointer basis in a quantum measurement process, its appearance
and universality under Markovian and non-Markovian dynamics, its theoretical
and experimental investigation in some other physical scenarios, and the
related phenomenon of double sudden change of trace distance discord. Several
open questions are identified, and we envisage that in answering them we will
gain significant further insight about the relation between the SCP and the
symmetry-geometric aspects of the quantum state space.Comment: Lectures on General Quantum Correlations and their Applications, F.
F. Fanchini, D. O. Soares Pinto, and G. Adesso (Eds.), Springer (2017), pp
309-33
Quantum majorization and a complete set of entropic conditions for quantum thermodynamics
What does it mean for one quantum process to be more disordered than another? Interestingly, this apparently abstract question arises naturally in a wide range of areas such as information theory, thermodynamics, quantum reference frames, and the resource theory of asymmetry. Here we use a quantum-mechanical generalization of majorization to develop a framework for answering this question, in terms of single-shot entropies, or equivalently, in terms of semi-definite programs. We also investigate some of the applications of this framework, and remarkably find that, in the context of quantum thermodynamics it provides the first complete set of necessary and sufficient conditions for arbitrary quantum state transformations under thermodynamic processes, which rigorously accounts for quantum-mechanical properties, such as coherence. Our framework of generalized thermal processes extends thermal operations, and is based on natural physical principles, namely, energy conservation, the existence of equilibrium states, and the requirement that quantum coherence be accounted for thermodynamically
- …