3,172 research outputs found
Three-party pure quantum states are determined by two two-party reduced states
We can uniquely calculate almost all entangled state vectors of tripartite
systems ABC if we know the reduced states of any two bipartite subsystems,
e.g., of AB and of BC. We construct the explicit solution.Comment: 2p
Multi-Party Pseudo-Telepathy
Quantum entanglement, perhaps the most non-classical manifestation of quantum
information theory, cannot be used to transmit information between remote
parties. Yet, it can be used to reduce the amount of communication required to
process a variety of distributed computational tasks. We speak of
pseudo-telepathy when quantum entanglement serves to eliminate the classical
need to communicate. In earlier examples of pseudo-telepathy, classical
protocols could succeed with high probability unless the inputs were very
large. Here we present a simple multi-party distributed problem for which the
inputs and outputs consist of a single bit per player, and we present a perfect
quantum protocol for it. We prove that no classical protocol can succeed with a
probability that differs from 1/2 by more than a fraction that is exponentially
small in the number of players. This could be used to circumvent the detection
loophole in experimental tests of nonlocality.Comment: 11 pages. To be appear in WADS 2003 proceeding
On the P-representable subset of all bipartite Gaussian separable states
P-representability is a necessary and sufficient condition for separability
of bipartite Gaussian states only for the special subset of states whose
covariance matrix are locally invariant. Although this
special class of states can be reached by a convenient
transformation over an arbitrary covariance matrix, it represents a loss of
generality, avoiding inference of many general aspects of separability of
bipartite Gaussian states.Comment: Final version with new results added. Slightly more detailed than the
accepted manuscript (to appear in Phys. Rev. A
Unsolvability of the Halting Problem in Quantum Dynamics
It is shown that the halting problem cannot be solved consistently in both
the Schrodinger and Heisenberg pictures of quantum dynamics. The existence of
the halting machine, which is assumed from quantum theory, leads into a
contradiction when we consider the case when the observer's reference frame is
the system that is to be evolved in both pictures. We then show that in order
to include the evolution of observer's reference frame in a physically sensible
way, the Heisenberg picture with time going backwards yields a correct
description.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Ancilla models for quantum operations: For what unitaries does the ancilla state have to be physical?
Any evolution described by a completely positive trace-preserving linear map
can be imagined as arising from the interaction of the evolving system with an
initially uncorrelated ancilla. The interaction is given by a joint unitary
operator, acting on the system and the ancilla. Here we study the properties
such a unitary operator must have in order to force the choice of a physical-
that is, positive-state for the ancilla if the end result is to be a
physical-that is, completely positive-evolution of the system.Comment: Quantum Information Processing, (2012
The Majorization Arrow in Quantum Algorithm Design
We apply majorization theory to study the quantum algorithms known so far and
find that there is a majorization principle underlying the way they operate.
Grover's algorithm is a neat instance of this principle where majorization
works step by step until the optimal target state is found. Extensions of this
situation are also found in algorithms based in quantum adiabatic evolution and
the family of quantum phase-estimation algorithms, including Shor's algorithm.
We state that in quantum algorithms the time arrow is a majorization arrow.Comment: REVTEX4.b4 file, 4 color figures (typos corrected.
On the Harmonic approximation for large Josephson junction coupling charge qubits
We revisit the harmonic approximation (HA) for a large Josephson junction
interacting with some charge qubits through the variational approach for the
quantum dynamics of the junction-qubit coupling system. By making use of
numerical calculation and analytical treatment, the conditions under which HA
works well can be precisely presented to control the parameters implementing
the two-qubit quantum logical gate through the couplings to the large junction
with harmonic oscillator (HO) Hamiltonian.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figure
Fermionic Linear Optics Revisited
We provide an alternative view of the efficient classical simulatibility of
fermionic linear optics in terms of Slater determinants. We investigate the
generic effects of two-mode measurements on the Slater number of fermionic
states. We argue that most such measurements are not capable (in conjunction
with fermion linear optics) of an efficient exact implementation of universal
quantum computation. Our arguments do not apply to the two-mode parity
measurement, for which exact quantum computation becomes possible, see
quant-ph/0401066.Comment: 16 pages, submitted to the special issue of Foundation of Physics in
honor of Asher Peres' 70th birthda
Mutually Unbiased Bases and Trinary Operator Sets for N Qutrits
A complete orthonormal basis of N-qutrit unitary operators drawn from the
Pauli Group consists of the identity and 9^N-1 traceless operators. The
traceless ones partition into 3^N+1 maximally commuting subsets (MCS's) of
3^N-1 operators each, whose joint eigenbases are mutually unbiased. We prove
that Pauli factor groups of order 3^N are isomorphic to all MCS's, and show how
this result applies in specific cases. For two qutrits, the 80 traceless
operators partition into 10 MCS's. We prove that 4 of the corresponding basis
sets must be separable, while 6 must be totally entangled (and Bell-like). For
three qutrits, 728 operators partition into 28 MCS's with less rigid structure
allowing for the coexistence of separable, partially-entangled, and totally
entangled (GHZ-like) bases. However, a minimum of 16 GHZ-like bases must occur.
Every basis state is described by an N-digit trinary number consisting of the
eigenvalues of N observables constructed from the corresponding MCS.Comment: LaTeX, 10 pages, 2 references adde
Improved Lower Bounds for Locally Decodable Codes and Private Information Retrieval
We prove new lower bounds for locally decodable codes and private information
retrieval. We show that a 2-query LDC encoding n-bit strings over an l-bit
alphabet, where the decoder only uses b bits of each queried position of the
codeword, needs code length m = exp(Omega(n/(2^b Sum_{i=0}^b {l choose i})))
Similarly, a 2-server PIR scheme with an n-bit database and t-bit queries,
where the user only needs b bits from each of the two l-bit answers, unknown to
the servers, satisfies t = Omega(n/(2^b Sum_{i=0}^b {l choose i})). This
implies that several known PIR schemes are close to optimal. Our results
generalize those of Goldreich et al. who proved roughly the same bounds for
linear LDCs and PIRs. Like earlier work by Kerenidis and de Wolf, our classical
lower bounds are proved using quantum computational techniques. In particular,
we give a tight analysis of how well a 2-input function can be computed from a
quantum superposition of both inputs.Comment: 12 pages LaTeX, To appear in ICALP '0
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