136 research outputs found

    Protocols and quantum circuits for implementing entanglement concentration in cat state, GHZ-like state and 9 families of 4-qubit entangled states

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    Three entanglement concentration protocols (ECPs) are proposed. The first ECP and a modified version of that are shown to be useful for the creation of maximally entangled cat and GHZ-like states from their non-maximally entangled counterparts. The last two ECPs are designed for the creation of maximally entangled (n+1)(n+1)-qubit state 12(∣Ψ0⟩∣0⟩+∣Ψ1⟩∣1⟩)\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}\left(|\Psi_{0}\rangle|0\rangle+|\Psi_{1}\rangle|1\rangle\right) from the partially entangled (n+1)(n+1)-qubit normalized state α∣Ψ0⟩∣0⟩+β∣Ψ1⟩∣1⟩\alpha|\Psi_{0}\rangle|0\rangle+\beta|\Psi_{1}\rangle|1\rangle, where ⟨Ψ1∣Ψ0⟩=0\langle\Psi_{1}|\Psi_{0}\rangle=0 and ∣α∣≠12|\alpha|\neq\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}. It is also shown that W, GHZ, GHZ-like, Bell and cat states and specific states from the 9 SLOCC-nonequivalent families of 4-qubit entangled states can be expressed as 12(∣Ψ0⟩∣0⟩+∣Ψ1⟩∣1⟩)\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}\left(|\Psi_{0}\rangle|0\rangle+|\Psi_{1}\rangle|1\rangle\right) and consequently the last two ECPs proposed here are applicable to all these states. Quantum circuits for implementation of the proposed ECPs are provided and it is shown that the proposed ECPs can be realized using linear optics. Efficiency of the ECPs are studied using a recently introduced quantitative measure (Phys. Rev. A 85\textbf{85}, 012307 (2012)). Limitations of the measure are also reported.Comment: 11 pages 7 figure

    Quantum Conference

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    A notion of quantum conference is introduced in analogy with the usual notion of a conference that happens frequently in today's world. Quantum conference is defined as a multiparty secure communication task that allows each party to communicate their messages simultaneously to all other parties in a secure manner using quantum resources. Two efficient and secure protocols for quantum conference have been proposed. The security and efficiency of the proposed protocols have been analyzed critically. It is shown that the proposed protocols can be realized using a large number of entangled states and group of operators. Further, it is shown that the proposed schemes can be easily reduced to protocol for multiparty quantum key distribution and some earlier proposed schemes of quantum conference, where the notion of quantum conference was different.Comment: 12 pages, 1 figur

    Orthogonal-state-based cryptography in quantum mechanics and local post-quantum theories

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    We introduce the concept of cryptographic reduction, in analogy with a similar concept in computational complexity theory. In this framework, class AA of crypto-protocols reduces to protocol class BB in a scenario XX, if for every instance aa of AA, there is an instance bb of BB and a secure transformation XX that reproduces aa given bb, such that the security of bb guarantees the security of aa. Here we employ this reductive framework to study the relationship between security in quantum key distribution (QKD) and quantum secure direct communication (QSDC). We show that replacing the streaming of independent qubits in a QKD scheme by block encoding and transmission (permuting the order of particles block by block) of qubits, we can construct a QSDC scheme. This forms the basis for the \textit{block reduction} from a QSDC class of protocols to a QKD class of protocols, whereby if the latter is secure, then so is the former. Conversely, given a secure QSDC protocol, we can of course construct a secure QKD scheme by transmitting a random key as the direct message. Then the QKD class of protocols is secure, assuming the security of the QSDC class which it is built from. We refer to this method of deduction of security for this class of QKD protocols, as \textit{key reduction}. Finally, we propose an orthogonal-state-based deterministic key distribution (KD) protocol which is secure in some local post-quantum theories. Its security arises neither from geographic splitting of a code state nor from Heisenberg uncertainty, but from post-measurement disturbance.Comment: 12 pages, no figure, this is a modified version of a talk delivered by Anirban Pathak at Quantum 2014, INRIM, Turin, Italy. This version is published in Int. J. Quantum. Info
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