1 / 16

Quantum Noise and Quantum Operations

Quantum Noise and Quantum Operations. Dan Ernst EECS 598 11/29/01. Outline. Background topics Classical noise Quantum operations Closed vs. Open quantum systems Operator-sum representation Trace preservation Quantum operation axioms Freedom in the operator-sum representation.

ownah
Télécharger la présentation

Quantum Noise and Quantum Operations

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 Noise and Quantum Operations Dan Ernst EECS 598 11/29/01

  2. Outline • Background topics • Classical noise • Quantum operations • Closed vs. Open quantum systems • Operator-sum representation • Trace preservation • Quantum operation axioms • Freedom in the operator-sum representation

  3. Density Matrix and Trace Operator • Quantum states can be expressed as a density matrix • Unitary operations on a density matrix are expressed as: • Trace of a matrix (sum of the diagonal elements) • Partial Trace (defined by linearity)

  4. Classical Noise 1-p 0 0 p p 1 1 1-p

  5. Quantum Operations • Quantum states transform as: • Simple Examples: • Unitary Transformation • Measurement Operation

  6. Old: Closed Quantum Systems • Output of the system is determined by a unitary transformation on the input state U

  7. New: Open Quantum Systems • Output of the system is determined by a unitary transformation on the principal systemand the environment. • Notice that the final state, e(r) might not be related by a unitary transformation to the initial state, r. In fact: U

  8. Operator-sum Representation • We’d like a representation in terms of operators on the principal system’s Hilbert space alone. where is an operator on the principal state space.

  9. Trace Preservation • In this model, the operation elements must satisfy the completeness relation: Since this relationship is true for all r it follows that:

  10. Trace Preservation • This equation is satisfied by quantum operations which are trace-preserving. • When extra information about what occurred in the process is obtained by measurement, the quantum operation can be non-trace-preserving, that is:

  11. Forget everything and start over

  12. Axioms of Quantum Operations • We define a quantum operation e as a map from the set of density operators of the input space Q1 to the set for Q2 with the following three properties: • A1: is the probability that the process e occurs when r is the initial state. Thus, . • Note that, with this definition, the correctly normalized final state is: • This axiom makes coping with measurements easier.

  13. Axioms of Quantum Operations • A2: e is a convex-linear map on the set of density matrices, that is, for probabilities {pi}, • A3: e is a completely positive map. That is, e(A) is positive for any positive operator A in Q1. Furthermore, this must hold for applying the map to any combined system RQ1.

  14. The Axioms and Operator-sum Theorem 8.1: The map e satisfies axioms A1, A2, and A3if and only if: For some set of operators {Ei} which map the input Hilbert space to the output Hilbert space, and Proof: (Nielsen/Chuang, pages 368-370)

  15. Unitary Freedom in Operator-sum Is operator-sum representation a unique description of an operation? (no, it’s not!)

  16. Unitary Freedom in Operator-sum • When does this happen? Theorem 8.2: (Unitary Freedom in Operator-sum Representation) Let E and F be quantum operations with operation elements {E1,…,Em} and {F1,…,Fn} respectively. Fill shorter list with zeros so m=n. Then E = F if and only if: where uij is an mxm unitary matrix of complex numbers. • Can use this theorem to show that the number of elements (Ei) needed for an operator-sum representation is no more than d2, where d is the number of dimensions of the Hilbert space.

More Related