1,168 research outputs found
On-demand generation of entanglement of atomic qubits via optical interferometry
The problem of on-demand generation of entanglement between single-atom
qubits via a common photonic channel is examined within the framework of
optical interferometry. As expected, for a Mach-Zehnder interferometer with
coherent laser beam as input, a high-finesse optical cavity is required to
overcome sensitivity to spontaneous emission. We show, however, that with a
twin-Fock input, useful entanglement can in principle be created without
cavity-enhancement. Both approaches require single-photon resolving detectors,
and best results would be obtained by combining both cavity-feedback and
twin-Fock inputs. Such an approach may allow a fidelity of using a
two-photon input and currently available mirror and detector technology. In
addition, we study interferometers based on NOON states and show that they
perform similarly to the twin-Fock states, yet without the need for
high-precision photo-detectors. The present interferometrical approach can
serve as a universal, scalable circuit element for quantum information
processing, from which fast quantum gates, deterministic teleportation,
entanglement swapping , can be realized with the aid of single-qubit
operations.Comment: To be published in PR
Channel Capacities versus Entanglement Measures in Multiparty Quantum States
For quantum states of two subsystems, entanglement measures are related to
capacities of communication tasks -- highly entangled states give higher
capacity of transmitting classical as well as quantum information. However, we
show that this is no more the case in general: quantum capacities of
multi-access channels, motivated by communication in quantum networks, do not
have any relation with genuine multiparty entanglement measures. Along with
revealing the structural richness of multi-access channel capacities, this
gives us a tool to classify multiparty quantum states from the perspective of
its usefulness in quantum networks, which cannot be visualized by known
multiparty entanglement measures.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, RevTeX4; v2: minor changes, some implications
strengthene
Full characterization of a three-photon GHZ state using quantum state tomography
We have performed the first experimental tomographic reconstruction of a
three-photon polarization state. Quantum state tomography is a powerful tool
for fully describing the density matrix of a quantum system. We measured 64
three-photon polarization correlations and used a "maximum-likelihood"
reconstruction method to reconstruct the GHZ state. The entanglement class has
been characterized using an entanglement witness operator and the maximum
predicted values for the Mermin inequality was extracted.Comment: 3 pages, 3 figure
Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger state protocols for fully connected qubit networks
We generalize the recently proposed Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger (GHZ)
tripartite protocol [A. Galiautdinov, J. M. Martinis, Phys. Rev. A 78,
010305(R) (2008)] to fully connected networks of weakly coupled qubits
interacting by way of anisotropic Heisenberg exchange g(XX+YY)+g1*ZZ. Our model
adopted here differs from the more familiar Ising-Heisenberg chain in that here
every qubit interacts with every other qubit in the circuit. The assumption of
identical couplings on all qubit pairs allows an elegant proof of the protocol
for arbitrary N. In order to further make contact with experiment, we study
fidelity degradation due to coupling imperfections by numerically simulating
the N=3 and N=4 cases. Our simulations indicate that the best fidelity at
unequal couplings is achieved when (a) the system is initially prepared in the
uniform superposition state (similarly to how it is done in the ideal case),
and (b) the entangling time and the final rotations on each of the qubits are
appropriately adjusted.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figur
Quantum correlations from local amplitudes and the resolution of the Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen nonlocality puzzle
The Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen nonlocality puzzle has been recognized as one of
the most important unresolved issues in the foundational aspects of quantum
mechanics. We show that the problem is resolved if the quantum correlations are
calculated directly from local quantities which preserve the phase information
in the quantum system. We assume strict locality for the probability amplitudes
instead of local realism for the outcomes, and calculate an amplitude
correlation function.Then the experimentally observed correlation of outcomes
is calculated from the square of the amplitude correlation function. Locality
of amplitudes implies that the measurement on one particle does not collapse
the companion particle to a definite state. Apart from resolving the EPR
puzzle, this approach shows that the physical interpretation of apparently
`nonlocal' effects like quantum teleportation and entanglement swapping are
different from what is usually assumed. Bell type measurements do not change
distant states. Yet the correlations are correctly reproduced, when measured,
if complex probability amplitudes are treated as the basic local quantities. As
examples we discuss the quantum correlations of two-particle maximally
entangled states and the three-particle GHZ entangled state.Comment: Std. Latex, 11 pages, 1 table. Prepared for presentation at the
International Conference on Quantum Optics, ICQO'2000, Minsk, Belaru
Experimental position-time entanglement with degenerate single photons
We report an experiment in which two-photon interference occurs between
degenerate single photons that never meet. The two photons travel in opposite
directions through our fibre-optic interferometer and interference occurs when
the photons reach two different, spatially separated, 2-by-2 couplers at the
same time. We show that this experiment is analogous to the conventional
Franson-type entanglement experiment where the photons are entangled in
position and time. We measure wavefunction overlaps for the two photons as high
as 94 3%.Comment: Updated to published version, new fig. 4., corrected typo
Experimental evidence for bounds on quantum correlations
We implemented the experiment proposed by Cabello [arXiv:quant-ph/0309172] to
test the bounds of quantum correlation. As expected from the theory we found
that, for certain choices of local observables, Cirel'son's bound of the
Clauser-Horne-Shimony-Holt inequality () is not reached by any
quantum states.Comment: RevTex style, 4 pages, 4 figures, to appear on PRL with minor
revisio
Contextuality in Measurement-based Quantum Computation
We show, under natural assumptions for qubit systems, that measurement-based
quantum computations (MBQCs) which compute a non-linear Boolean function with
high probability are contextual. The class of contextual MBQCs includes an
example which is of practical interest and has a super-polynomial speedup over
the best known classical algorithm, namely the quantum algorithm that solves
the Discrete Log problem.Comment: Version 3: probabilistic version of Theorem 1 adde
Quantum mechanics and elements of reality inferred from joint measurements
The Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen argument on quantum mechanics incompleteness is
formulated in terms of elements of reality inferred from joint (as opposed to
alternative) measurements, in two examples involving entangled states of three
spin-1/2 particles. The same states allow us to obtain proofs of the
incompatibility between quantum mechanics and elements of reality.Comment: LaTeX, 12 page
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