1 / 18

Quantum Correlations from Classical Coherence Theory?

Quantum Correlations from Classical Coherence Theory?. Daniel F. V. JAMES Department of Physics & Center for Quantum Information and Quantum Control University of Toronto. CQO-X, R ochester. My group at Toronto. Asma Al-Qasimi (postdoc) Christian Weedbrook (postdoc)

matt
Télécharger la présentation

Quantum Correlations from Classical Coherence Theory?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Quantum Correlations from Classical Coherence Theory? Daniel F. V. JAMES Department of Physics & Center for Quantum Information and Quantum Control University of Toronto CQO-X, Rochester

  2. My group at Toronto Asma Al-Qasimi (postdoc) Christian Weedbrook (postdoc) Omar El-Gamel (PhD student) Hoi-Kawn Lau (PhD student) Nicolas Quesada (PhD student) Arnab Dewanjee (PhD student) Jaspreet Sahota (PhD student) Kevin Marshall (MSc student) Asma Al-Qasimi (postdoc) Christian Weedbrook (postdoc) Omar El-Gamel (PhD student) Hoi-Kawn Lau (PhD student) Nicolas Quesada (PhD student) Arnab Dewanjee (PhD student) Jaspreet Sahota (PhD student) Kevin Marshall (MSc student)

  3. Outline • Entanglement of pure quantum states. • The menagerie of non-classical mixed state quantum correlations. • Can Classical Coherence theory help? The sinisterness of entanglement.

  4. Entanglement and all that… •  Separable state of two 2-level systems: •  But in general the state of two 2-level systems is:

  5. Quantifying Entanglement of 2 Pure Qubits Average out qubit B: (Born and Wolf, p.628)

  6. Extension 1: Two 3-level systems? Average out qutrit B: (Two competing claimants due to Friberg et al, and Wolf et al.…) Omar Gamel & DFVJ, “Measures of quantum state purity and classical degree of polarization,”Phys Rev A 86 033830 (2012)

  7. Extension 2: Mixed States • • Mixed states: roll the dice, and create a pure state (with some probability): (“convex hull”) • “Average” Tangle: depends on decomposition • “Minimized Average Tangle”: • Reduces to T(y) for pure states • T=0 implies separable state • T=1 implies maximally entangled state (e.g. Bell states) • Analytic expression (Wootters, 1998) makes things very convenient!

  8. Two Qubit Mixed State Concurrence* Transpose (in computational basis) “spin flip matrix” Eigenvalues of R (in decreasing order) “there remains a basic question concerning the interpretation …that has not yet been resolved.” *W.K. Wootters, Phys. Rev. Lett.80, 2245 (1998)

  9. Other Quantities (non-exhaustive list)* • Negativity of the partial transpose (Peres, 1996; Vidal and Werner, 2001) -if the partial transpose has negative eigenvalues it is entangled (IFF for two qubits or qubit-qutrit). -readily computable for larger systems. • Fully Entangled Fraction (Bennett et al., 1996) -Maximum overlap with a fully entangled state -connection with optimum teleportation fidelity -not a monotone • Schmidt Number -Defined for Pure and Mixed states -connection with “ancilla assisted process tomography” (Altpeter et al. 2003) *friendly guide: Quesada, Al-Qasimi & DFVJ, J. Mod. Opt.59, 1322 (2012)

  10. Other Quantities (cont…) • Discord (Olivier and Zurek, 2001) -Another notion of quantumness: how does measurement of system A affect the state of system B? -Connection with “DQC1” model of quantum computing (accidental?) -Difficult to compute (exact formula for states with maximally mixed marginals; approximate formula for “X states”) • Measurement Induced Disturbance (Luo, 2008) -Related to discord, easier to calculate • Entropic Measures of Quantum Correlations… (Lang, Caves, Shaji, 2011) -six in total (MID and Discord are extremal cases…)

  11. Connections? • Geometric Relations (Modi et al., 2010): “distances” between product states, classically correlated states, separable states and entangled states • Algebraic Relations: does entanglement limit discord? How does entanglement or discord change with purity?

  12. Examples: Tangle Tangle and Purity Munro, DFVJ, Kwiat, White, Phys Rev A 64, 030302 (2001) Discord and Purity Al-Qasimi, DFVJ, Phys Rev A83, 032101(2011)

  13. • What do these all mean? • Doesn’t it rather make you nostalgic for good old fashioned classical coherence theory?

  14. Another Approach? • The Bloch Vectors are a wonderful way of thinking about individual 2-level quantum systems: we should not abandon it when dealing with pairs of 2-level systems. • What would Albert Michelson or Fritz Zernike do? Bloch-vector correlation matrix: - “Two-photon Stokes Parameters” - Observable quantities (actually what is measured in tomography*) *DFVJ, Kwiat, Munro, White, Phys Rev A 64, 052312 (2001)

  15. Properties of ci,j • 3x3 matrix (uh-oh…) • “sort of” a tensor…* • real, but not necessarily symmetric • Singular Value Decomposition Singular values (real, positive) orthonormal vectors: • Why not use these orthonormal vectors to define a special basis for each qubit? *Englert and Metwally, Kinematics of qubit pairs (2002)

  16. “sinister” states • orthonormal, yes, but they do not necessarily form a right handed system… • “sinister states”:= if one of the SVD bases is left-handed, and one is right-handed* • Properties: 1. All entangled states (pure and mixed) are sinister. 3. All sinister states have discord (i.e. it’s a discord witness) 4. Separable states with Werner decomposition of length N= 3 or less are never sinister. *Term introduced by Joe Altepeter.

  17. Maybe is just as good a quantifier of “quantumness” as any of those other measures?* • easy to calculate • physically motivated ~ 1.0 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 * Al-Qasimi and DFVJ, in preparation

  18. Conclusion • “Quantumness” is elusive and frustrating. • “Quantum phenomena do not occur in a Hilbert space. They occur in a laboratory.”(Asher Peres, 1995) Suggested Corollary: Maybe we should start approaching quantum mechanics is a branch of physics, not of information theory…

More Related