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9783527407255

Elements of Quantum Information

by ;
  • ISBN13:

    9783527407255

  • ISBN10:

    3527407251

  • Edition: 1st
  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 2007-03-26
  • Publisher: Wiley-VCH

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Summary

'Elements of Quantum Information' introduces the reader to the fascinating field of quantum information processing, which lives on the interface between computer science, physics, mathematics, and engineering. This interdisciplinary branch of science thrives on the use of quantum mechanics as a resource for high potential modern applications. With its wide coverage of experiments, applications, and specialized topics - all written by renowned experts - 'Elements of Quantum Information' provides an indispensable up-to-date account of the state of the art of this rapidly advancing field and takes the reader straight up to the frontiers of current research. The articles have first appeared as a special issue of the journal 'Fortschritte der Physik/Progress of Physics'. Since then, they have been carefully updated. The book will be an inspiring source of information and insight for anyone researching and specializing in experiments and theory of quantum information.

Author Biography

Wolfgang P. Schleich, born in 1957, is head of the Institute of Quantum Physics at the University of Ulm, Germany, and Adjunct Professor at the University of North Texas in Denton, USA. While working at the Universities of New Mexico, Albuquerque, of Texas at Austin and the Max Planck Institute for Quantum Physics, Garching, Germany, he has collaborated with world leaders in physics such as M.O. Scully, J.A. Wheeler and H. Walther. Professor Schleich has published more than 230 papers on problems of quantum optics, foundations of quantum mechanics and general relativity and is the author of the highly acclaimed textbook Quantum Optics in Phase Space. For his work he has received numerous awards and honors, including the Ernst Abbe Medal of the International Commission for Optics, the Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Prize of the German Science Foundation and the Max Planck Award. He is a Fellow of the Institute of Physics, the American Physical Society and the Optical Society of America and has been elected a member of several academies, such as the Leopoldina, the Heidelberg Academy of Science, and the Royal Danish Academy of Sciences and Letters.

Herbert Walther (1935-2006) received his Ph.D. from the University of Heidelberg in 1962. After working at various universities in Germany, France and the United States, Professor Walther accepted a post as Professor of Physics at the University of Munich in 1975, from which he took retirement in 2003. From 1981, Professor Walther also worked for the Max Planck Society. He founded the Max Planck Institute of Quantum Optics in Garching, and headed the Institute as its Director until his retirement. From 1990 to 1996, he acted as the Max Planck Society's Vice President. Professor Walther was a Fellow and member of many professional physics organizations and scientific boards. He was awarded numerous honours and awards, among them the Max Born Prize (1978) and the Humboldt Medal (1998).

Table of Contents

Preface to the Bookp. XVII
Preface to the Journalp. XIX
List of Contributorsp. XXI
The Deterministic Generation of Photons by Cavity Quantum Electrodynamicsp. 1
Introductionp. 1
Oscillatory Exchange of Photons Between an Atom and a Cavity Fieldp. 1
Experimental Set-up of the One-atom Maserp. 3
One-atom Maser as a Source of Non-classical Lightp. 5
Review of Experiments on Basic Properties of the One-atom Maserp. 8
Statistics of Detector Clicksp. 12
Trapping Statesp. 13
Trapping State Stabilizationp. 17
Fock States on Demandp. 17
Dynamical Preparation of n-photon States in a Cavityp. 18
The One-atom Maser Spectrump. 24
Other Microwave Cavity Experimentsp. 26
Collapse-and-revival of the Rabi Oscillations in an Injected Coherent Fieldp. 26
Atom-photon and Atom-atom Entanglementp. 27
Atom-photon Phase Gatep. 28
Quantum Nondestructive-measurement of a Photonp. 28
Wigner-function of a One-photon Statep. 29
Multiparticle Entanglementp. 29
Schrodinger Cats and Decoherencep. 29
Cavity QED Experiments in the Visible Spectral Regionp. 30
The One-atom Laserp. 30
Atoms Pushed by a Few Photonsp. 31
Single-photon Sourcesp. 33
Single-atom Laser using an Ion Trapp. 34
Conclusions and Outlookp. 38
Referencesp. 39
Optimization of Segmented Linear Paul Traps and Transport of Stored Particlesp. 45
Introductionp. 45
Optimization of a Two-layer Microstructured Ion Trapp. 46
Design Objectivesp. 47
Operating Mode and Modeling of the Segmented Linear Paul Trapp. 49
Optimization of the Radial Potentialp. 51
Optimization of the Axial Potentialp. 52
Open Loop Control of Ion Transportp. 54
Non-adiabatic Heating Sourcesp. 54
Overview of the Applied Optimization Strategiesp. 55
The Optimal Control Methodp. 55
Optimization Resultsp. 58
Ion Heating due to Anharmonic Dispersionp. 59
Quantum Mechanical Estimate of Non-adiabatic Parametric Heatingp. 59
Improved Initial Guess Function and Ultra-fast Transportp. 60
Discussion of the Open-loop Resultp. 62
Outlookp. 64
Appendixp. 65
Referencesp. 66
Transport Dynamics of Single Ions in Segmented Microstructured Paul Trap Arraysp. 69
Introductionp. 69
Classical Equations of Motionp. 71
Classical Dynamics of Ion Transportp. 72
Homogeneous Solutionp. 73
Green's Function and General Solutionp. 74
Adiabatic Limitp. 75
Quantum and Classical, Dragged Harmonic Oscillators with Constant Frequencyp. 76
The Dragged Quantum Harmonic Oscillatorp. 78
Transport Dynamics in a Well-controlled Regimep. 81
Two Analytical Examplesp. 82
Near-optimum Transport Functionsp. 86
High-frequency Limit, Adiabatic Transport, and Approximate Trajectoriesp. 86
Please supply a short titlep. 87
Determination of Waveformsp. 87
Potential Fluctuations and Aspect-ratio Rulep. 90
Conclusionsp. 95
Appendixp. 96
Referencesp. 96
Ensemble Quantum Computation and Algorithmic Cooling in Optical Latticesp. 99
Introductionp. 99
Physical Systemp. 102
Bose-Hubbard Modelp. 102
Initial State Propertiesp. 103
Entropy as Figure of Meritp. 105
Basic Operationsp. 106
Ensemble Quantum Computationp. 108
Cooling with Filteringp. 112
Algorithmic Ground State Coolingp. 114
The Protocolp. 114
Theoretical Descriptionp. 115
Conclusionp. 118
Referencesp. 119
Quantum Information Processing in Optical Lattices and Magnetic Microtrapsp. 121
Introductionp. 121
Optical Latticesp. 122
Preparation of a Qubit Registerp. 122
A Quantum Conveyer Belt for Neutral Atomsp. 123
Controlled Collisionsp. 124
Magnetic Microtrapsp. 127
Qubit States on the Atom Chipp. 128
State-dependent Microwave Potentialsp. 132
Qubit Readout in Microtrapsp. 135
Stable fiber Fabry-Perot Cavitiesp. 137
FFP Cavity Fabrication and Performancep. 137
On-chip Atom Detection with a FFP Cavityp. 138
Single Atom Preparationp. 141
Conclusionp. 142
Referencesp. 142
Two-dimensional Bose-Einstein Condensates in a CO[subscript 2]-laser Optical Latticep. 145
Introductionp. 345
Experimental Setup and Procedurep. 146
Experimental Resultsp. 148
Conclusionsp. 151
Referencesp. 153
Creating and Probing Long-range Order in Atomic Cloudsp. 155
Introductionp. 155
Collective Couplingp. 157
Experimental Setupp. 158
Ring Cavityp. 159
Dipole Trap for [superscript 85]Rbp. 160
Optical Molassesp. 162
Signatures of Collective Atomic Recoil Lasingp. 163
Beat Note of Field Modesp. 163
Spectra of Recoil-induced Resonancesp. 165
Atomic Transportp. 166
Creating Long-range Orderp. 168
Analytic Treatment for Perfect Bunchingp. 168
Radiation Pressurep. 170
Phase-locking by Imperfect Mirrorsp. 171
Simulations of Atomic Trajectories with Friction and Diffusionp. 172
Lasing Thresholdp. 173
Self-synchronizationp. 174
Probing Long-range Orderp. 176
Bragg Scatteringp. 176
Heterodyned Bragg Spectrap. 178
Measuring the Bragg Scattering Phasep. 179
Conclusionp. 180
Referencesp. 181
Detecting Neutral Atoms on an Atom Chipp. 185
Introductionp. 185
Detecting Single Atomsp. 186
Measuring the Scattered Light: Fluorescence Detectionp. 186
Measuring the Driving Fieldp. 187
Absorption on Resonancep. 187
Refractionp. 189
Cavitiesp. 189
Absorption on Resonancep. 189
Refractionp. 190
Many Atoms in a Cavityp. 190
Concentric Cavityp. 191
Miniaturizationp. 191
Properties of Fiber Cavitiesp. 192
Loss Mechanisms for a Cavityp. 193
Losses due to the Gap Lengthp. 194
Losses due to Transversal Misalignmentp. 195
Losses due to Angular Misalignmentp. 196
Fresnel Reflectionsp. 197
Other Fiber Optical Components for the Atom Chipp. 199
Fluorescence and Absorption Detectorsp. 199
A Single Mode Tapered Lensed Fiber Dipole Trapp. 199
Integration of Fibers on the Atom Chipp. 201
Building Fiber Cavitiesp. 201
The SU-8 Resistp. 203
Test of the SU-8 Structurep. 204
Pilot Test for Atom Detection with Small Waistsp. 205
Dropping Atoms through a Concentric Cavityp. 205
Detecting Magnetically Guided Atomsp. 207
Conclusionp. 208
Referencesp. 209
High Resolution Rydberg Spectroscopy of Ultracold Rubidium Atomsp. 211
Introductionp. 211
Experimental Setup and Cold Atom Preparationp. 212
Vacuum System and Magneto Optical Trap (MOT)p. 212
Rydberg Laser System and Rydberg Excitationp. 215
Detection of the Rydberg Atomsp. 216
Excitation Sequencep. 217
Spectroscopy of Rydberg States,
Spatial and State Selective Addressing of Rydberg Statesp. 220
Spatial Selective Rydberg Excitationp. 220
Hyperfine Selective Rydberg Excitationp. 221
Autler-Townes Splittingp. 222
Conclusion and Outlookp. 224
Referencesp. 224
Prospects of Ultracold Rydberg Gases for Quantum Information Processingp. 227
Introductionp. 227
Excitation of Rydberg Atoms from an Ultracold Gasp. 229
Van-der-Waals Interactionp. 230
Blockade of Excitationp. 231
Ionizationp. 232
States with Permanent Electric Dipole Momentsp. 234
Forster Resonancesp. 236
Conclusionp. 239
Referencesp. 241
Quantum State Engineering with Spinsp. 243
Introductionp. 243
Quantum States of Spinsp. 244
Deutsch-Josza Algorithmp. 246
The Deutsch-Josza Algorithmp. 246
Implementation of the 3-qubit Deutsch-Josza Algorithm Using Liquid State NMRp. 247
2,3,4-Trifluoroanilinep. 247
Preparation of Pseudo-pure Statesp. 248
Results on the 3-qubit DJ-algorithmp. 249
Entanglement of an Electron and Nuclear Spin in [superscript 15]N@C[subscript 60]p. 251
Spin Quantum Computing in the Solid State: S-busp. 253
The S-bus Conceptp. 253
Single Crystal CaF[subscript 2] : Ce[superscript 3+] as an S-bus systemp. 255
Experimental Detailsp. 256
3-qubit Pseudo-pure Statesp. 258
2-qubit Deutsch-Josza Algorithmp. 259
Controlling Nuclear Spin Decoherence in CaF[subscript 2] : Cep. 260
Summary and Outlookp. 263
Referencesp. 263
Improving the Purity of One- and Two-qubit Gatesp. 265
Introductionp. 265
Quantum Gate with Bit-flip Noisep. 266
Bloch-Redfield Master Equationp. 267
Purity Decayp. 268
Numerical Solutionp. 269
Coherence Stabilization for Single Qubitsp. 270
Dynamical Decoupling by Harmonic Drivingp. 271
Coherent Destruction of Tunnelingp. 272
Coherence Stabilization for a CNOT Gatep. 275
Heisenberg vs. Ising Couplingp. 276
Coherence Stabilization by an AC Fieldp. 278
Numerical Solutionp. 279
Implementation with Quantum Dotsp. 282
Conclusionsp. 282
Appendixp. 283
Referencesp. 284
How to Distill Entanglement from a Finite Amount of Qubits?p. 287
Introductionp. 287
Entanglement Distillationp. 288
The Protocolp. 289
CNOT Distillation for a Finite Set of Entangled Systemsp. 293
Iterative Distillationp. 294
Example of the Iterative Distillation for Small Finite Setsp. 297
Conclusionsp. 299
Appendixp. 300
Referencesp. 301
Experimental Quantum Secret Sharingp. 303
Introductionp. 303
Theoryp. 504
The GHZ-protocolp. 304
The [Psi][Characters not reproducible]-protocolp. 305
The Single Qubit Protocolp. 306
Security of the Protocolsp. 307
Experimentp. 309
The [Psi][Characters not reproducible]-protocolp. 309
The Single-qubit Protocolp. 310
Conclusionp. 312
Referencesp. 314
Free Space Quantum Key Distribution: Towards a Real Life Applicationp. 315
Introductionp. 315
Setupp. 316
Transmitter Unitp. 316
Free Space Linkp. 317
Receiver Unitp. 318
Synchronisation and Automatic Alignment Controlp. 329
Sifting, Error Correction and Privacy Amplificationp. 319
Experimental Resultsp. 320
Conclusionp. 322
Referencesp. 323
Continuous Variable Entanglement Between Frequency Modesp. 325
Introductionp. 325
Sideband Separationp. 327
Theoryp. 328
Pictorial Descriptionp. 331
Experiment and Resultsp. 331
Conclusion and Discussionp. 335
Referencesp. 336
Factorization of Numbers with Physical Systemsp. 339
Introductionp. 339
Chirping a Two-photon Transitionp. 340
Chirped Laser Pulsesp. 340
Excitation Probability Amplitudep. 341
Example for Factorizationp. 342
Driving a One-photon Transitionp. 343
Modelp. 344
Floquet Ladderp. 345
Pulse Trainp. 346
Factorizationp. 347
Factorization with Floquet Ladderp. 348
Factorization with a Pulse Trainp. 349
NMR-experimentp. 350
Conclusionsp. 352
Referencesp. 353
Quantum Algorithms for Number Fieldsp. 355
Introductionp. 355
Outline of the Surveyp. 355
Why Number Fields?p. 356
Some History of the Subjectp. 356
Geometry of Numbersp. 357
Number Fieldsp. 357
Latticesp. 358
Integral Elementsp. 359
The Class Numberp. 360
The Regulatorp. 361
Complexity Resultsp. 361
Reductionp. 362
Reduced Idealsp. 362
Infrastructurep. 363
Geometric Interpretation of Gp. 364
Results from Analytic Number Theoryp. 366
Distribution of Prime Numbersp. 366
Class Number Formulasp. 367
Examples of Minima Distributionsp. 368
Computing the Regulatorp. 370
Real Quadratic Casep. 370
Hallgren's Algorithmp. 371
Generalization of the Weak Periodicity Conditionp. 372
Computation of Other Invariantsp. 374
The Principal Ideal Problemp. 374
Computing the Class Numberp. 375
Referencesp. 376
Implementation Complexity of Physical Processes as a Natural Extension of Computational Complexityp. 377
Introductionp. 377
Similar Complexity Bounds for Different Tasksp. 379
Relating Control Problems to Hard Computational Problemsp. 385
The Need for a Control-theoretic Foundation of Complexityp. 388
Hamiltonians that Compute Autonomouslyp. 393
Referencesp. 396
Implementation of Generalized Measurements with Minimal Disturbance on a Quantum Computerp. 399
Introductionp. 399
Minimal-disturbing Implementations of POVMsp. 401
Generalized Measurements of Quantum Systemsp. 401
Positive-operator Valued Measuresp. 402
Orthogonal Measurementsp. 403
Disturbance of a Generalized Measurementp. 404
Minimal-disturbing Implementation of a POVMp. 405
Symmetric Matrices and their Structurep. 406
Representations of Finite Groupsp. 407
Projective Representationsp. 408
Symmetry of a Matrix and Schur's Lemmap. 410
Symmetric POVMs Define Matrices with Symmetryp. 411
Implementation of Symmetric POVMsp. 413
Cyclic and Heisenberg-Weyl Groupsp. 416
Cyclic Groupsp. 426
Heisenberg-Weyl Groupsp. 429
Conclusions and Outlookp. 423
Referencesp. 424
Full Counting Statistics of Interacting Electronsp. 425
Introductionp. 425
Concepts of FCSp. 428
Full Counting Statistics in Interacting Quantum Dotsp. 435
FCS of a Set for Intermediate Strength Conductancep. 437
Non-Markovian Effects: Renormalization and Finite Lifetime Broadening of Charge Statesp. 440
Keldysh Action and CGF tn Majorana Representationp. 442
FCS and Coulomb Interaction in Diffusive Conductorsp. 443
Model and Effective Actionp. 445
"Cold Electron" Regimep. 447
"Hot Electron" Regimep. 453
Summaryp. 454
Referencesp. 455
Quantum Limit of the Carnot Enginep. 457
Introductionp. 457
Spin-oscillator Modelp. 458
Basic Definitionsp. 458
Thermodynamic Variables for Gp. 461
Master Equationp. 462
Lindblad Superoperatorp. 462
Time Slot Operatorsp. 463
Machine Cyclesp. 465
Choice of Amplitudes a[Characters not reproducible] and Control Functions [theta][superscript (j)] ([tau])p. 465
Heat and Workp. 467
Energy Balancep. 468
Fluctuationsp. 468
Numerical Resultsp. 470
Heat Enginep. 470
Heat Pumpp. 474
Longtime Limitp. 475
Quantum Limit and Classical Limitp. 475
Summary and Conclusionsp. 477
Referencesp. 479
Colour Platesp. 481
Indexp. 491
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved.

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