2,412 research outputs found
Quantum de Finetti theorem under fully-one-way adaptive measurements
We prove a version of the quantum de Finetti theorem: permutation-invariant
quantum states are well approximated as a probabilistic mixture of multi-fold
product states. The approximation is measured by distinguishability under fully
one-way LOCC (local operations and classical communication) measurements. Our
result strengthens Brand\~{a}o and Harrow's de Finetti theorem where a kind of
partially one-way LOCC measurements was used for measuring the approximation,
with essentially the same error bound. As main applications, we show (i) a
quasipolynomial-time algorithm which detects multipartite entanglement with
amount larger than an arbitrarily small constant (measured with a variant of
the relative entropy of entanglement), and (ii) a proof that in quantum
Merlin-Arthur proof systems, polynomially many provers are not more powerful
than a single prover when the verifier is restricted to one-way LOCC
operations.Comment: V2: minor changes. V3: new title, more discussions added,
presentation improved. V4: minor changes, close to published versio
Refinement and verification of concurrent systems specified in Object-Z and CSP
The formal development of large or complex systems can often be facilitated by the use of more than one formal specification language. Such a combination of languages is particularly suited to the specification of concurrent or distributed systems, where both the modelling of processes and state is necessary. This paper presents an approach to refinement and verification of specifications written using a combination of Object-Z and CSP. A common semantic basis for the two languages enables a unified method of refinement to be used, based upon CSP refinement. To enable state-based techniques to be used for the Object-Z components of a specification we develop state-based refinement relations which are sound and complete with respect to CSP refinement. In addition, a verification method for static and dynamic properties is presented. The method allows us to verify properties of the CSP system specification in terms of its component Object-Z classes by using the laws of the CSP operators together with the logic for Object-Z
Communicating over adversarial quantum channels using quantum list codes
We study quantum communication in the presence of adversarial noise. In this
setting, communicating with perfect fidelity requires using a quantum code of
bounded minimum distance, for which the best known rates are given by the
quantum Gilbert-Varshamov (QGV) bound. By asking only for arbitrarily high
fidelity and allowing the sender and reciever to use a secret key with length
logarithmic in the number of qubits sent, we achieve a dramatic improvement
over the QGV rates. In fact, we find protocols that achieve arbitrarily high
fidelity at noise levels for which perfect fidelity is impossible. To achieve
such communication rates, we introduce fully quantum list codes, which may be
of independent interest.Comment: 6 pages. Discussion expanded and more details provided in proofs. Far
less unclear than previous versio
Additive Extensions of a Quantum Channel
We study extensions of a quantum channel whose one-way capacities are
described by a single-letter formula. This provides a simple technique for
generating powerful upper bounds on the capacities of a general quantum
channel. We apply this technique to two qubit channels of particular
interest--the depolarizing channel and the channel with independent phase and
amplitude noise. Our study of the latter demonstrates that the key rate of BB84
with one-way post-processing and quantum bit error rate q cannot exceed
H(1/2-2q(1-q)) - H(2q(1-q)).Comment: 6 pages, one figur
Classical signature of quantum annealing
A pair of recent articles concluded that the D-Wave One machine actually
operates in the quantum regime, rather than performing some classical
evolution. Here we give a classical model that leads to the same behaviors used
in those works to infer quantum effects. Thus, the evidence presented does not
demonstrate the presence of quantum effects.Comment: 8 pages, 3 pdf figure
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