1,596 research outputs found
A comparison of the entanglement measures negativity and concurrence
In this paper we investigate two different entanglement measures in the case
of mixed states of two qubits. We prove that the negativity of a state can
never exceed its concurrence and is always larger then
where is the concurrence of the state.
Furthermore we derive an explicit expression for the states for which the upper
or lower bound is satisfied. Finally we show that similar results hold if the
relative entropy of entanglement and the entanglement of formation are
compared
Optimal teleportation with a mixed state of two qubits
We consider a single copy of a mixed state of two qubits and derive the
optimal trace-preserving local operations assisted by classical communication
(LOCC) such as to maximize the fidelity of teleportation that can be achieved
with this state. These optimal local operations turn out to be implementable by
one-way communication, and always yields a teleportation fidelity larger than
2/3 if the original state is entangled. This maximal achievable fidelity is an
entanglement measure and turns out to quantify the minimal amount of mixing
required to destroy the entanglement in a quantum state.Comment: 5 pages, expanded version of part II of quant-ph/0203073(v2
Renormalization and tensor product states in spin chains and lattices
We review different descriptions of many--body quantum systems in terms of
tensor product states. We introduce several families of such states in terms of
known renormalization procedures, and show that they naturally arise in that
context. We concentrate on Matrix Product States, Tree Tensor States,
Multiscale Entanglement Renormalization Ansatz, and Projected Entangled Pair
States. We highlight some of their properties, and show how they can be used to
describe a variety of systems.Comment: Review paper for the special issue of J. Phys.
Matrix product states represent ground states faithfully
We quantify how well matrix product states approximate exact ground states of
1-D quantum spin systems as a function of the number of spins and the entropy
of blocks of spins. We also investigate the convex set of local reduced density
operators of translational invariant systems. The results give a theoretical
justification for the high accuracy of renormalization group algorithms, and
justifies their use even in the case of critical systems
Continuous Matrix Product States for Quantum Fields
We define matrix product states in the continuum limit, without any reference
to an underlying lattice parameter. This allows to extend the density matrix
renormalization group and variational matrix product state formalism to quantum
field theories and continuum models in 1 spatial dimension. We illustrate our
procedure with the Lieb-Liniger model
Mapping local Hamiltonians of fermions to local Hamiltonians of spins
We show how to map local fermionic problems onto local spin problems on a
lattice in any dimension. The main idea is to introduce auxiliary degrees of
freedom, represented by Majorana fermions, which allow us to extend the
Jordan-Wigner transformation to dimensions higher than one. We also discuss the
implications of our results in the numerical investigation of fermionic
systems.Comment: Added explicit mappin
Multipartite entanglement in 2 x 2 x n quantum systems
We classify multipartite entangled states in the 2 x 2 x n (n >= 4) quantum
system, for example the 4-qubit system distributed over 3 parties, under local
filtering operations. We show that there exist nine essentially different
classes of states, and they give rise to a five-graded partially ordered
structure, including the celebrated Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger (GHZ) and W
classes of 3 qubits. In particular, all 2 x 2 x n-states can be
deterministically prepared from one maximally entangled state, and some
applications like entanglement swapping are discussed.Comment: 9 pages, 3 eps figure
Variational Characterisations of Separability and Entanglement of Formation
In this paper we develop a mathematical framework for the characterisation of
separability and entanglement of formation (EoF) of general bipartite states.
These characterisations are of the variational kind, meaning that separability
and EoF are given in terms of a function which is to be minimized over the
manifold of unitary matrices. A major benefit of such a characterisation is
that it directly leads to a numerical procedure for calculating EoF. We present
an efficient minimisation algorithm and an apply it to the bound entangled 3X3
Horodecki states; we show that their EoF is very low and that their distance to
the set of separable states is also very low. Within the same variational
framework we rephrase the results by Wootters (W. Wootters, Phys. Rev. Lett.
80, 2245 (1998)) on EoF for 2X2 states and present progress in generalising
these results to higher dimensional systems.Comment: 11 pages RevTeX, 4 figure
Exploiting quantum parallelism to simulate quantum random many-body systems
We present an algorithm that exploits quantum parallelism to simulate randomness in a quantum system. In our scheme, all possible realizations of the random parameters are encoded quantum mechanically in a superposition state of an auxiliary system. We show how our algorithm allows for the efficient simulation of dynamics of quantum random spin chains with known numerical methods. We propose an experimental realization based on atoms in optical lattices in which disorder could be simulated in parallel and in a controlled way through the interaction with another atomic species
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