87 research outputs found

    Optimal continuous-variable teleportation under energy constraint

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    Quantum teleportation is one of the crucial protocols in quantum information processing. It is important to accomplish an efficient teleportation under practical conditions, aiming at a higher fidelity desirably using fewer resources. The continuous-variable (CV) version of quantum teleportation was first proposed using a Gaussian state as a quantum resource, while other attempts were also made to improve performance by applying non-Gaussian operations. We investigate the CV teleportation to find its ultimate fidelity under energy constraint identifying an optimal quantum state. For this purpose, we present a formalism to evaluate teleportation fidelity as an expectation value of an operator. Using this formalism, we prove that the optimal state must be a form of photon-number entangled states. We further show that Gaussian states are near-optimal while non-Gaussian states make a slight improvement and therefore are rigorously optimal, particularly in the low-energy regime.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, published versio

    Quantum phase estimation using path-symmetric entangled states

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    We study the sensitivity of phase estimation using a generic class of path-symmetric entangled states βˆ£Ο†βŸ©βˆ£0⟩+∣0βŸ©βˆ£Ο†βŸ©|\varphi\rangle|0\rangle+|0\rangle|\varphi\rangle, where an arbitrary state βˆ£Ο†βŸ©|\varphi\rangle occupies one of two modes in quantum superposition. This class of states includes the previously considered states, i.e. NOONNOON states and entangled coherent states, as special cases. With its generalization, we identify the practical limit of phase estimation under energy constraint that is characterized by the photon statistics of the component state βˆ£Ο†βŸ©|\varphi\rangle. We first show that quantum Cramer-Rao bound (QCRB) can be lowered with super-Poissonianity of the state βˆ£Ο†βŸ©|\varphi\rangle. By introducing a component state of the form βˆ£Ο†βŸ©=q∣1⟩+1βˆ’q∣N⟩|\varphi\rangle=\sqrt{q}|1\rangle+\sqrt{1-q}|N\rangle, we particularly show that an arbitrarily small QCRB can be achieved even with a finite energy in an ideal situation. For practical measurement schemes, we consider a parity measurement and a full photon-counting method to obtain phase-sensitivity. Without photon loss, the latter scheme employing any path-symmetric states βˆ£Ο†βŸ©βˆ£0⟩+∣0βŸ©βˆ£Ο†βŸ©|\varphi\rangle|0\rangle+|0\rangle|\varphi\rangle achieves the QCRB over the entire range [0,2Ο€][0,2\pi] of unknown phase shift Ο•\phi whereas the former does so in a certain confined range of Ο•\phi. We find that the case of βˆ£Ο†βŸ©=q∣1⟩+1βˆ’q∣N⟩|\varphi\rangle=\sqrt{q}|1\rangle+\sqrt{1-q}|N\rangle provides the most robust resource against loss among the considered entangled states over the whole range of input energy. Finally we also propose experimental schemes to generate these path-symmetric entangled states.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, published versio

    Gaussian benchmark for optical communication aiming towards ultimate capacity

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    We establish the fundamental limit of communication capacity within Gaussian schemes under phase-insensitive Gaussian channels, which employ multimode Gaussian states for encoding and collective Gaussian operations and measurements for decoding. We prove that this Gaussian capacity is additive, i.e., its upper bound occurs with separable encoding and separable receivers so that a single-mode communication suffices to achieve the largest capacity under Gaussian schemes. This rigorously characterizes the gap between the ultimate Holevo capacity and the capacity within Gaussian communication, showing that Gaussian regime is not sufficient to achieve the Holevo bound particularly in the low-photon regime. Furthermore the Gaussian benchmark established here can be used to critically assess the performance of non-Gaussian protocols for optical communication. We move on to identify non-Gaussian schemes to beat the Gaussian capacity and show that a non-Gaussian receiver recently implemented by Becerra et al. [Nat. Photon. 7, 147 (2013)] can achieve this aim with an appropriately chosen encoding strategy.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, with supplemental materia

    Continuous-variable dense coding via a general Gaussian state: Monogamy relation

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    We study a continuous variable (CV) dense-coding protocol, originally proposed to employ a two-mode squeezed state, using a general two-mode Gaussian state as a quantum channel. We particularly obtain conditions to manifest quantum advantage by beating two well-known single-mode schemes, namely, the squeezed-state scheme (best Gaussian scheme) and the number-state scheme (optimal scheme achieving the Holevo bound). We then extend our study to a multipartite Gaussian state and investigate the monogamy of operational entanglement measured by the communication capacity under the dense-coding protocol. We show that this operational entanglement represents a strict monogamy relation, by means of Heisenberg's uncertainty principle among different parties, i.e., the quantum advantage for communication can be possible for only one pair of two-mode systems among many parties

    Gaussian states under coarse-grained continuous variable measurements

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    The quantum-to-classical transition of a quantum state is a topic of great interest in fundamental and practical aspects. A coarse-graining in quantum measurement has recently been suggested as its possible account in addition to the usual decoherence model. We here investigate the reconstruction of a Gaussian state (single mode and two modes) by coarse-grained homodyne measurements. To this aim, we employ two methods, the direct reconstruction of the covariance matrix and the maximum likelihood estimation (MLE), respectively, and examine the reconstructed state under each scheme compared to the state interacting with a Gaussian (squeezed thermal) reservoir. We clearly demonstrate that the coarse-graining model, though applied equally to all quadrature amplitudes, is not compatible with the decoherence model by a thermal (phase-insensitive) reservoir. Furthermore, we compare the performance of the direct reconstruction and the MLE methods by investigating the fidelity and the nonclassicality of the reconstructed states and show that the MLE method can generally yield a more reliable reconstruction, particularly without information on a reference frame (phase of input state).Comment: published version, 9 pages, 5 figure

    Classical capacity of Gaussian communication under a single noisy channel

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    A long-standing problem on the classical capacity of bosonic Gaussian channels has recently been resolved by proving the minimum output entropy conjecture. It is also known that the ultimate capacity quantified by the Holevo bound can be achieved asymptotically by using an infinite number of channels. However, it is less understood to what extent the communication capacity can be reached if one uses a finite number of channels, which is a topic of practical importance. In this paper, we study the capacity of Gaussian communication, i.e., employing Gaussian states and Gaussian measurements to encode and decode information under a single-channel use. We prove that the optimal capacity of single-channel Gaussian communication is achieved by one of two well-known protocols, i.e., coherent-state communication or squeezed-state communication, depending on the energy (number of photons) as well as the characteristics of the channel. Our result suggests that the coherent-state scheme known to achieve the ultimate information-theoretic capacity is not a practically optimal scheme for the case of using a finite number of channels. We find that overall the squeezed-state communication is optimal in a small-photon-number regime whereas the coherent-state communication performs better in a large-photon-number regime.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, published versio

    Steering Criteria via Covariance Matrices of Local Observables in Arbitrary Dimensional Quantum Systems

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    We derive steerability criteria applicable for both finite and infinite dimensional quantum systems using covariance matrices of local observables. We show that these criteria are useful to detect a wide range of entangled states particularly in high dimensional systems and that the Gaussian steering criteria for general M x N-modes of continuous variables are obtained as a special case. Extending from the approach of entanglement detection via covariance matrices, our criteria are based on the local uncertainty principles incorporating the asymmetric nature of steering scenario. Specifically, we apply the formulation to the case of local orthogonal observables and obtain some useful criteria that can be straightforwardly computable, and testable in experiment, with no need for numerical optimization.Comment: 6 pages with further "Remarks" and "Acknowledgement" adde
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