35,671 research outputs found
When only two thirds of the entanglement can be distilled
We provide an example of distillable bipartite mixed state such that, even in
the asymptotic limit, more pure-state entanglement is required to create it
than can be distilled from it. Thus, we show that the irreversibility in the
processes of formation and distillation of bipartite states, recently proved in
[G. Vidal, J.I. Cirac, Phys. Rev. Lett. 86, (2001) 5803-5806], is not limited
to bound-entangled states.Comment: 4 pages, revtex, 1 figur
Scaling Laws for Non-Intercommuting Cosmic String Networks
We study the evolution of non-interacting and entangled cosmic string
networks in the context of the velocity-dependent one-scale model. Such
networks may be formed in several contexts, including brane inflation. We show
that the frozen network solution , although generic, is only a
transient one, and that the asymptotic solution is still as in the
case of ordinary (intercommuting) strings, although in the present context the
universe will usually be string-dominated. Thus the behaviour of two strings
when they cross does not seem to affect their scaling laws, but only their
densities relative to the background.Comment: Phys. Rev. D (in press); v2: final published version (references
added, typos corrected
Quantifying nonorthogonality
An exploratory approach to the possibility of analyzing nonorthogonality as a
quantifiable property is presented. Three different measures for the
nonorthogonality of pure states are introduced, and one of these measures is
extended to single-particle density matrices using methods that are similar to
recently introduced techniques for quantifying entanglement. Several
interesting special cases are considered. It is pointed out that a measure of
nonorthogonality can meaningfully be associated with a single mixed quantum
state. It is then shown how nonorthogonality can be unlocked with classical
information; this analysis reveals interesting inequalities and points to a
number of connections between nonorthogonality and entanglement.Comment: Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
A method of enciphering quantum states
In this paper, we propose a method of enciphering quantum states of two-state
systems (qubits) for sending them in secrecy without entangled qubits shared by
two legitimate users (Alice and Bob). This method has the following two
properties. First, even if an eavesdropper (Eve) steals qubits, she can extract
information from them with certain probability at most. Second, Alice and Bob
can confirm that the qubits are transmitted between them correctly by measuring
a signature. If Eve measures m qubits one by one from n enciphered qubits and
sends alternative ones (the Intercept/Resend attack), a probability that Alice
and Bob do not notice Eve's action is equal to (3/4)^m or less. Passwords for
decryption and the signature are given by classical binary strings and they are
disclosed through a public channel. Enciphering classical information by this
method is equivalent to the one-time pad method with distributing a classical
key (random binary string) by the BB84 protocol. If Eve takes away qubits,
Alice and Bob lose the original quantum information. If we apply our method to
a state in iteration, Eve's success probability decreases exponentially. We
cannot examine security against the case that Eve makes an attack with using
entanglement. This remains to be solved in the future.Comment: 21 pages, Latex2e, 10 epsf figures. v2: 22 pages, added two
references, several clarifying sentences are added in Sec. 5, typos
corrected, a new proof is provided in Appendix A and it is shorter than the
old one. v3: 23 pages, one section is adde
Quantum communication without alignment using multiple-qubit single-photon states
We propose a scheme for encoding logical qubits in a subspace protected
against collective rotations around the propagation axis using the polarization
and transverse spatial degrees of freedom of single photons. This encoding
allows for quantum key distribution without the need of a shared reference
frame. We present methods to generate entangled states of two logical qubits
using present day down-conversion sources and linear optics, and show that the
application of these entangled logical states to quantum information schemes
allows for alignment-free tests of Bell's inequalities, quantum dense coding
and quantum teleportation
Irreversibility in asymptotic manipulations of entanglement
We show that the process of entanglement distillation is irreversible by
showing that the entanglement cost of a bound entangled state is finite. Such
irreversibility remains even if extra pure entanglement is loaned to assist the
distillation process.Comment: RevTex, 3 pages, no figures Result on indistillability of PPT states
under pure entanglement catalytic LOCC adde
Remote State Preparation
Quantum teleportation uses prior entanglement and forward classical
communication to transmit one instance of an unknown quantum state. Remote
state preparation (RSP) has the same goal, but the sender knows classically
what state is to be transmitted. We show that the asymptotic classical
communication cost of RSP is one bit per qubit - half that of teleportation -
and becomes even less when transmitting part of a known entangled state. We
explore the tradeoff between entanglement and classical communication required
for RSP, and discuss RSP capacities of general quantum channels.Comment: 4 pages including 1 epsf figure; v3 has an additional author and
discusses relation to work of Devetak and Berger (quant-ph/0102123); v4
improves low-entanglement protocols without back communication to perform as
well as low-entanglement protocols with back communication; v5 (journal
version) has a few small change
Negative entropy and information in quantum mechanics
A framework for a quantum mechanical information theory is introduced that is
based entirely on density operators, and gives rise to a unified description of
classical correlation and quantum entanglement. Unlike in classical (Shannon)
information theory, quantum (von Neumann) conditional entropies can be negative
when considering quantum entangled systems, a fact related to quantum
non-separability. The possibility that negative (virtual) information can be
carried by entangled particles suggests a consistent interpretation of quantum
informational processes.Comment: 4 pages RevTeX, 2 figures. Expanded discussion of quantum
teleportation and superdense coding, and minor corrections. To appear in
Phys. Rev. Let
Factoring in a Dissipative Quantum Computer
We describe an array of quantum gates implementing Shor's algorithm for prime
factorization in a quantum computer. The array includes a circuit for modular
exponentiation with several subcomponents (such as controlled multipliers,
adders, etc) which are described in terms of elementary Toffoli gates. We
present a simple analysis of the impact of losses and decoherence on the
performance of this quantum factoring circuit. For that purpose, we simulate a
quantum computer which is running the program to factor N = 15 while
interacting with a dissipative environment. As a consequence of this
interaction randomly selected qubits may spontaneously decay. Using the results
of our numerical simulations we analyze the efficiency of some simple error
correction techniques.Comment: plain tex, 18 pages, 8 postscript figure
Quantum cryptography with squeezed states
A quantum key distribution scheme based on the use of displaced squeezed
vacuum states is presented. The states are squeezed in one of two field
quadrature components, and the value of the squeezed component is used to
encode a character from an alphabet. The uncertainty relation between
quadrature components prevents an eavesdropper from determining both with
enough precision to determine the character being sent. Losses degrade the
performance of this scheme, but it is possible to use phase-sensitive
amplifiers to boost the signal and partially compensate for their effect.Comment: 15 pages, no figure
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