18,332 research outputs found
Quantum data compression, quantum information generation, and the density-matrix renormalization group method
We have studied quantum data compression for finite quantum systems where the
site density matrices are not independent, i.e., the density matrix cannot be
given as direct product of site density matrices and the von Neumann entropy is
not equal to the sum of site entropies. Using the density-matrix
renormalization group (DMRG) method for the 1-d Hubbard model, we have shown
that a simple relationship exists between the entropy of the left or right
block and dimension of the Hilbert space of that block as well as of the
superblock for any fixed accuracy. The information loss during the RG procedure
has been investigated and a more rigorous control of the relative error has
been proposed based on Kholevo's theory. Our results are also supported by the
quantum chemistry version of DMRG applied to various molecules with system
lengths up to 60 lattice sites. A sum rule which relates site entropies and the
total information generated by the renormalization procedure has also been
given which serves as an alternative test of convergence of the DMRG method.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure
Improving zero-error classical communication with entanglement
Given one or more uses of a classical channel, only a certain number of
messages can be transmitted with zero probability of error. The study of this
number and its asymptotic behaviour constitutes the field of classical
zero-error information theory, the quantum generalisation of which has started
to develop recently. We show that, given a single use of certain classical
channels, entangled states of a system shared by the sender and receiver can be
used to increase the number of (classical) messages which can be sent with no
chance of error. In particular, we show how to construct such a channel based
on any proof of the Bell-Kochen-Specker theorem. This is a new example of the
use of quantum effects to improve the performance of a classical task. We
investigate the connection between this phenomenon and that of
``pseudo-telepathy'' games. The use of generalised non-signalling correlations
to assist in this task is also considered. In this case, a particularly elegant
theory results and, remarkably, it is sometimes possible to transmit
information with zero-error using a channel with no unassisted zero-error
capacity.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures. Version 2 is the same as the journal version plus
figure 1 and the non-signalling box exampl
Abstract composition rule for relativistic kinetic energy in the thermodynamical limit
We demonstrate by simple mathematical considerations that a power-law tailed
distribution in the kinetic energy of relativistic particles can be a limiting
distribution seen in relativistic heavy ion experiments. We prove that the
infinite repetition of an arbitrary composition rule on an infinitesimal amount
leads to a rule with a formal logarithm. As a consequence the stationary
distribution of energy in the thermodynamical limit follows the composed
function of the Boltzmann-Gibbs exponential with this formal logarithm. In
particular, interactions described as solely functions of the relative
four-momentum squared lead to kinetic energy distributions of the
Tsallis-Pareto (cut power-law) form in the high energy limit.Comment: Submitted to Europhysics Letters. LaTeX, 3 eps figure
Classical Correlations and Entanglement in Quantum Measurements
We analyze a quantum measurement where the apparatus is initially in a mixed
state. We show that the amount of information gained in a measurement is not
equal to the amount of entanglement between the system and the apparatus, but
is instead equal to the degree of classical correlations between the two. As a
consequence, we derive an uncertainty-like expression relating the information
gain in the measurement and the initial mixedness of the apparatus. Final
entanglement between the environment and the apparatus is also shown to be
relevant for the efficiency of the measurement.Comment: to appear in Physical Review Letter
An improved perturbation approach to the 2D Edwards polymer -- corrections to scaling
We present the results of a new perturbation calculation in polymer
statistics which starts from a ground state that already correctly predicts the
long chain length behaviour of the mean square end--to--end distance , namely the solution to the 2~dimensional~(2D) Edwards model.
The thus calculated is shown to be convergent in ,
the number of steps in the chain, in contrast to previous methods which start
from the free random walk solution. This allows us to calculate a new value for
the leading correction--to--scaling exponent~. Writing , where in 2D,
our result shows that . This value is also supported by an
analysis of 2D self--avoiding walks on the {\em continuum}.Comment: 17 Pages of Revtex. No figures. Submitted to J. Phys.
Information-theoretic temporal Bell inequality and quantum computation
An information-theoretic temporal Bell inequality is formulated to contrast
classical and quantum computations. Any classical algorithm satisfies the
inequality, while quantum ones can violate it. Therefore, the violation of the
inequality is an immediate consequence of the quantumness in the computation.
Furthermore, this approach suggests a notion of temporal nonlocality in quantum
computation.Comment: v2: 5 pages, refereces added, discussion slightly revised, main
result unchanged. v3: typos correcte
Co - Ed : March - Two Step
https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/mmb-ps/2445/thumbnail.jp
A strong converse for classical channel coding using entangled inputs
A fully general strong converse for channel coding states that when the rate
of sending classical information exceeds the capacity of a quantum channel, the
probability of correctly decoding goes to zero exponentially in the number of
channel uses, even when we allow code states which are entangled across several
uses of the channel. Such a statement was previously only known for classical
channels and the quantum identity channel. By relating the problem to the
additivity of minimum output entropies, we show that a strong converse holds
for a large class of channels, including all unital qubit channels, the
d-dimensional depolarizing channel and the Werner-Holevo channel. This further
justifies the interpretation of the classical capacity as a sharp threshold for
information-transmission.Comment: 9 pages, revte
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