947 research outputs found
Foundations of Quantum Discord
This paper summarizes the basics of the notion of quantum discord and how it
relates to other types of correlations in quantum physics. We take the
fundamental information theoretic approach and illustrate our exposition with a
number of simple examples.Comment: 3 pages, special issue edited by Diogo de Oliveira Soares Pinto et a
Extracting Classical Correlations from a Bipartite Quantum System
In this paper we discuss the problem of splitting the total correlations for
a bipartite quantum state described by the Von Neumann mutual information into
classical and quantum parts. We propose a measure of the classical correlations
as the difference between the Von Neumann mutual information and the relative
entropy of entanglement. We compare this measure with different measures
proposed in the literature.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figur
Qubit rotation and Berry Phase
A quantized fermion can be represented by a scalar particle encircling a
magnetic flux line. It has the spinor structure which can be constructed from
quantum gates and qubits. We have studied here the role of Berry phase in
removing dynamical phase during one qubit rotation of a quantized fermion. The
entanglement of two qubit inserting spin-echo to one of them results the change
of Berry phase that can be considered as a measure of entanglement. Some effort
is given to study the effect of noise on the Berry phase of spinor and their
entangled states.Comment: 12 page
Basics of quantum computation
Quantum computers require quantum logic, something fundamentally different to
classical Boolean logic. This difference leads to a greater efficiency of
quantum computation over its classical counter-part. In this review we explain
the basic principles of quantum computation, including the construction of
basic gates, and networks. We illustrate the power of quantum algorithms using
the simple problem of Deutsch, and explain, again in very simple terms, the
well known algorithm of Shor for factorisation of large numbers into primes. We
then describe physical implementations of quantum computers, focusing on one in
particular, the linear ion-trap realization. We explain that the main obstacle
to building an actual quantum computer is the problem of decoherence, which we
show may be circumvented using the methods of quantum error correction.Comment: 28 pages including 17 figures, invited basic review article for
Progress in Quantum Electronic
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