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Quantum state discrimination

The term quantum state discrimination collectively refers to quantum-informatics techniques, with the help of which, by performing a small number of measurements on a physical system, its specific quantum state can be identified . And this is provided that the set of states in which the system can be is known in advance, and we only need to determine which one it is. This assumption distinguishes such techniques from quantum tomography, which does not impose additional requirements on the state of the system, but requires many times more measurements.

If the set of states in which the investigated system can be is represented by orthogonal vectors, the situation is particularly simple. To unambiguously determine the state of the system, it is enough to perform a quantum measurement in the basis formed by these vectors. The given quantum state can then be flawlessly identified from the measured value. Moreover, it can be easily shown that if the individual states are not orthogonal to each other, there is no way to tell them apart with certainty. Therefore, in such a case, it is always necessary to take into account the possibility of incorrect or inconclusive determination of the state of the system. However, there are techniques that try to alleviate this deficiency. With exceptions, these techniques can be divided into two groups, namely those based on error minimization and then those that allow the state to be determined unambiguously in exchange for lower efficiency.

The first group of techniques is based on the works of Carl W. Helstrom from the 60s and 70s of the 20th century [1] and in its basic form consists in the implementation of projective quantum measurement, where the measurement operators are projective representations. The second group is based on the conclusions of a scientific article published by ID Ivanovich in 1987 [2] and requires the use of generalized measurement, in which the elements of the POVM set are taken as measurement operators. Both groups of techniques are currently the subject of active, primarily theoretical, research, and apart from a number of special cases, there is no general solution that would allow choosing measurement operators in the form of expressible analytical formula.

More precisely, in its standard formulation, the problem involves performing some POVM on a given unknown state , under the promise that the state received is an element of a collection of states , with occurring with probability , that is, . The task is then to find the probability of the POVM correctly guessing which state was received. Since the probability of the POVM returning the -th outcome when the given state was has the form , it follows that the probability of successfully determining the correct state is .[3][4]

Helstrom Measurement edit

The discrimination of two states can be solved optimally using the Helstrom measurement.[5] With two states   comes two probabilities   and POVMs  . Since   for all POVMs,  . So the probability of success is:

 

To maximize the probability of success, the trace needs to be maximized. That's accomplished when   is a projector on the positive eigenspace of  ,[5] and the maximal probability of success is given by

 

where   denotes the trace norm.

Discriminating between multiple states edit

If the task is to discriminate between more than two quantum states, there is no general formula for the optimal POVM and success probability. Nonetheless, the optimal success probability, for the task of discriminating between the elements of a given ensemble  , can always be written as[4]

 
This is obtained observing that   is the a priori probability of getting the  -th state, and   is the probability of (correctly) guessing the input to be  , conditioned to having indeed received the state  .

While this expression cannot be given an explicit form in the general case, it can be solved numerically via Semidefinite programming.[4] An alternative approach to discriminate between a given ensemble of states is to the use the so-called Pretty Good Measurement (PGM), also known as the square root measurement. This is an alternative discrimination strategy that is not in general optimal, but can still be shown to work pretty well.[6]

References edit

  1. ^ Helstrom, Carl W. Quantum detection and estimation theory. New York: Academic Press. ISBN 978-0-12-340050-5. OCLC 316552953.
  2. ^ Ivanovic, I.D. (August 1987). "How to differentiate between non-orthogonal states". Physics Letters A. 123 (6): 257–259. Bibcode:1987PhLA..123..257I. doi:10.1016/0375-9601(87)90222-2. ISSN 0375-9601.
  3. ^ Bae, Joonwoo; Kwek, Leong-Chuan (2015). "Quantum state discrimination and its applications". Journal of Physics A: Mathematical and Theoretical. 48 (8): 083001. arXiv:1707.02571. Bibcode:2015JPhA...48h3001B. doi:10.1088/1751-8113/48/8/083001. S2CID 119199057.
  4. ^ a b c Watrous, John (2018-04-26). The Theory of Quantum Information. Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/9781316848142. ISBN 978-1-316-84814-2.
  5. ^ a b Barnett, Stephen M.; Croke, Sarah (2009). "Quantum state discrimination". Adv. Opt. Photon. 1 (8): 238–278. arXiv:0810.1970. Bibcode:2009AdOP....1..238B. doi:10.1364/AOP.1.000238. S2CID 15398601.
  6. ^ Montanaro, Ashley (2007). "On the distinguishability of random quantum states". Commun. Math. Phys. 273 (3): 619–636. arXiv:quant-ph/0607011. Bibcode:2007CMaPh.273..619M. doi:10.1007/s00220-007-0221-7. S2CID 12516161.

External links edit

  • Interactive demonstration about quantum state discrimination

quantum, state, discrimination, help, expand, this, article, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, article, czech, december, 2021, click, show, important, translation, instructions, machine, translation, like, deepl, google, translate, useful, starting,. You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Czech December 2021 Click show for important translation instructions Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Czech Wikipedia article at cs Rozliseni kvantovych stavu see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated cs Rozliseni kvantovych stavu to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation The term quantum state discrimination collectively refers to quantum informatics techniques with the help of which by performing a small number of measurements on a physical system its specific quantum state can be identified And this is provided that the set of states in which the system can be is known in advance and we only need to determine which one it is This assumption distinguishes such techniques from quantum tomography which does not impose additional requirements on the state of the system but requires many times more measurements If the set of states in which the investigated system can be is represented by orthogonal vectors the situation is particularly simple To unambiguously determine the state of the system it is enough to perform a quantum measurement in the basis formed by these vectors The given quantum state can then be flawlessly identified from the measured value Moreover it can be easily shown that if the individual states are not orthogonal to each other there is no way to tell them apart with certainty Therefore in such a case it is always necessary to take into account the possibility of incorrect or inconclusive determination of the state of the system However there are techniques that try to alleviate this deficiency With exceptions these techniques can be divided into two groups namely those based on error minimization and then those that allow the state to be determined unambiguously in exchange for lower efficiency The first group of techniques is based on the works of Carl W Helstrom from the 60s and 70s of the 20th century 1 and in its basic form consists in the implementation of projective quantum measurement where the measurement operators are projective representations The second group is based on the conclusions of a scientific article published by ID Ivanovich in 1987 2 and requires the use of generalized measurement in which the elements of the POVM set are taken as measurement operators Both groups of techniques are currently the subject of active primarily theoretical research and apart from a number of special cases there is no general solution that would allow choosing measurement operators in the form of expressible analytical formula More precisely in its standard formulation the problem involves performing some POVM E i i displaystyle E i i on a given unknown state r displaystyle rho under the promise that the state received is an element of a collection of states s i i displaystyle sigma i i with s i displaystyle sigma i occurring with probability p i displaystyle p i that is r i p i s i displaystyle rho sum i p i sigma i The task is then to find the probability of the POVM E i i displaystyle E i i correctly guessing which state was received Since the probability of the POVM returning the i displaystyle i th outcome when the given state was s j displaystyle sigma j has the form Prob i j tr E i s j displaystyle text Prob i j operatorname tr E i sigma j it follows that the probability of successfully determining the correct state is P s u c c e s s i p i tr s i E i displaystyle P rm success sum i p i operatorname tr sigma i E i 3 4 Contents 1 Helstrom Measurement 2 Discriminating between multiple states 3 References 4 External linksHelstrom Measurement editThe discrimination of two states can be solved optimally using the Helstrom measurement 5 With two states s 0 s 1 displaystyle sigma 0 sigma 1 nbsp comes two probabilities p 0 p 1 displaystyle p 0 p 1 nbsp and POVMs E 0 E 1 displaystyle E 0 E 1 nbsp Since i E i I displaystyle sum i E i I nbsp for all POVMs E 1 I E 0 displaystyle E 1 I E 0 nbsp So the probability of success is P success p 0 tr s 0 E 0 p 1 tr s 1 E 1 p 0 tr s 0 E 0 p 1 tr s 1 I s 1 E 0 p 1 tr p 0 s 0 p 1 s 1 E 0 displaystyle P text success p 0 operatorname tr sigma 0 E 0 p 1 operatorname tr sigma 1 E 1 p 0 operatorname tr sigma 0 E 0 p 1 operatorname tr sigma 1 I sigma 1 E 0 p 1 operatorname tr p 0 sigma 0 p 1 sigma 1 E 0 nbsp To maximize the probability of success the trace needs to be maximized That s accomplished when E 0 displaystyle E 0 nbsp is a projector on the positive eigenspace of p 0 s 0 p 1 s 1 displaystyle p 0 sigma 0 p 1 sigma 1 nbsp 5 and the maximal probability of success is given by P success 1 2 1 2 p 0 s 0 p 1 s 1 1 displaystyle P text success frac 1 2 frac 1 2 p 0 sigma 0 p 1 sigma 1 1 nbsp where 1 displaystyle cdot 1 nbsp denotes the trace norm Discriminating between multiple states editIf the task is to discriminate between more than two quantum states there is no general formula for the optimal POVM and success probability Nonetheless the optimal success probability for the task of discriminating between the elements of a given ensemble p i s i i 1 N displaystyle p i sigma i i 1 N nbsp can always be written as 4 P s u c c e s s max E i i p i tr E i s i displaystyle P rm success max E i sum i p i operatorname tr E i sigma i nbsp This is obtained observing that p i displaystyle p i nbsp is the a priori probability of getting the i displaystyle i nbsp th state and tr E i s i displaystyle operatorname tr E i sigma i nbsp is the probability of correctly guessing the input to be s i displaystyle sigma i nbsp conditioned to having indeed received the state s i displaystyle sigma i nbsp While this expression cannot be given an explicit form in the general case it can be solved numerically via Semidefinite programming 4 An alternative approach to discriminate between a given ensemble of states is to the use the so called Pretty Good Measurement PGM also known as the square root measurement This is an alternative discrimination strategy that is not in general optimal but can still be shown to work pretty well 6 References edit Helstrom Carl W Quantum detection and estimation theory New York Academic Press ISBN 978 0 12 340050 5 OCLC 316552953 Ivanovic I D August 1987 How to differentiate between non orthogonal states Physics Letters A 123 6 257 259 Bibcode 1987PhLA 123 257I doi 10 1016 0375 9601 87 90222 2 ISSN 0375 9601 Bae Joonwoo Kwek Leong Chuan 2015 Quantum state discrimination and its applications Journal of Physics A Mathematical and Theoretical 48 8 083001 arXiv 1707 02571 Bibcode 2015JPhA 48h3001B doi 10 1088 1751 8113 48 8 083001 S2CID 119199057 a b c Watrous John 2018 04 26 The Theory of Quantum Information Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 9781316848142 ISBN 978 1 316 84814 2 a b Barnett Stephen M Croke Sarah 2009 Quantum state discrimination Adv Opt Photon 1 8 238 278 arXiv 0810 1970 Bibcode 2009AdOP 1 238B doi 10 1364 AOP 1 000238 S2CID 15398601 Montanaro Ashley 2007 On the distinguishability of random quantum states Commun Math Phys 273 3 619 636 arXiv quant ph 0607011 Bibcode 2007CMaPh 273 619M doi 10 1007 s00220 007 0221 7 S2CID 12516161 External links editInteractive demonstration about quantum state discrimination Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Quantum state discrimination amp oldid 1189106077, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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