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QUANTUM ENTANGLEMENT

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Title: QUANTUM ENTANGLEMENT


1
QUANTUM ENTANGLEMENT AND IMPLICATIONS IN
INFORMATION PROCESSING Quantum TELEPORTATION
K. Mangala Sunder Department of Chemistry IIT
Madras
2
Contents
1. Introduction
2. Bits / Qubits/ Quantum Gates
3. Entanglement
4. Teleportation / Teleportation through gates /
Experimental Realization
5. Application of teleportation
3
Introduction
  • What are quantum computation and quantum
  • information processing?
  • They are concerned with computations and the
    study of the information processing tasks that
    can be accomplished using quantum mechanical
    systems

M. A. Nielsen and I. L. Chuang, Quantum
Computation and Quantum Information, Cambridge
Univ. Press
V. Vedral et al, Prog. Quantum Electron 22
(1998), 1-39
4
Introduction
  • One must understand the difference
  • between classical computation and
  • quantum computation.

M. A. Nielsen and I. L. Chuang, Quantum
Computation and Quantum Information, Cambridge
Univ. Press
V. Vedral et al, Prog. Quantum Electron 22
(1998), 1-39
5
Introduction
  • conventional computer can do anything a
  • quantum computer is capable of.
  • However, quantum computation offers an
  • enormous advantage over classical
  • computation in terms of the available data
  • that a computer can handle.

M. A. Nielsen and I. L. Chuang, Quantum
Computation and Quantum Information, Cambridge
Univ. Press
V. Vedral et al, Prog. Quantum Electron 22
(1998), 1-39
6
Introduction
  • Also by Moores Law quantum effects will
  • show up in the functioning of electronic
  • devices as they are made smaller and
  • smaller

M. A. Nielsen and I. L. Chuang, Quantum
Computation and Quantum Information, Cambridge
Univ. Press
V. Vedral et al, Prog. Quantum Electron 22
(1998), 1-39
7
Bits / Qubits
  • bit is a fundamental unit of classical
  • computation and classical information
  • only possible values for a classical bit
  • are and
  • quantum analogue of classical bit
  • quantum bit or qubit

8
Bits / Qubits
  • qubits are correctly described by two quantum
  • states can be a linear combination of
  • and . The two states here are the only
  • possible outcomes when you measure the
  • state of the qubit.

9
a matrix representation for the states.
Bits / Qubits
Remember that there are other quantum
states where the number of outcomes can be one
of many rather than one of two. Those are
not considered here.
10
where and are complex numbers such
that
  • state of a qubit is a vector of unit length in
  • a two dimensional complex vector space

11
  • state of a qubit cannot be determined i.e.
  • a and b cannot be determined from a single
  • measurement.
  • there is nothing one can experimentally do
  • to them to reveal their states
  • using the normalization condition

The result above can be derived from simple
quantum mechanics of spins
12
where and represent a point on the
unit three dimension sphere known as Bloch sphere
  • single qubit operation can be described within
  • the Bloch sphere picture

M. A. Nielsen and I. L. Chuang, Quantum
Computation and Quantum Information, Cambridge
Univ. Press
13
Multiple Qubits
  • two classical bits can take four different
    possible values
  • two qubit system has four computational basis
    states
  • thus the state can be represented as

such that
14
Bits qubits
0,1
00,01,10,11
000,001,010,100, 011,101,110,111
This means that quantum computer can, in only one
computational step, perform the same
mathematical operation on different input
numbers encoded in coherent superposition of n
qubits
15
  • what distinguishes classical and quantum
    computing is how the information is
  • encoded and manipulated
  • quantum parallelism

F
  • conventional gates are irreversible in
    operation. Quantum gates
  • are reversible. (will elaborate later)
  • existing real world computers dissipate energy
    as they run

16
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17
Quantum Gates
  • classical computer electrical circuit
    containing wires and logic gates

Irreversible (except NOT Gate)
  • quantum computer quantum circuit containing
    wires and elementary
  • quantum gates

reversible
  • quantum analogue of NOT Gate is X-Gate
  • it acts on the state of the qubit to interchange
    the role of computational
  • basis state

X
18
  • in matrix form

Z Gate
Z
  • it leaves unchanged but flips the sign of

Z
  • in matrix form

19
  • Hadamard Gate

H
  • turns and halfway between
    and

and
  • in matrix form
  • its operation is just a rotation of about
    the y-axis followed by a reflection
  • through x-y plane

20
  • can all 2 dimensional matrices be appropriate
    for quantum gates for single
  • qubits? Think about it.
  • matrix representing the single qubit gate
    must be unitary

Controlled Not gate
  • two qubit gate consists of two input qubits
    known as controlled qubit and
  • target qubit

A B A B
0 0 0 0
0 1 0 1
1 0 1 1
1 1 1 0
target wire
control wire
21
  • in matrix form
  • operation will be reversed by merely repeating
    the gate

B A XOR B
22
Entanglement
  • entanglement is a quantum mechanical phenomena
    in which the quantum
  • states of two or more particles have to be
    described collectively without
  • being able to identify individual states
  • it introduces the correlation between the
    particles such that measurement
  • on one particle will affect the state of other
  • algebraically if a composite state is not
    separable it is called as an
  • entangled state

Non-separable for specific values of coeffs.
  • entanglement is at the heart of the quantum
    computation and information
  • processing

A. Peres, Phys. Rev. Lett. 77 (1996), 1413-15
M. Horodecki et al, Phys. Lett. A 223 (1996), 1-8
23
  • responsible for the exponential nature of
    quantum parallelism

singlet state
  • neither of the subsystem in singlet state can be
    attributed by a pure state
  • any measurement on subsystem one leads to two
    possibilities for the first qubit

1. with probability ½ and post
measurement state
2. with probability ½ and post
measurement state
  • any subsequent measurement on second sub system
    will yield
  • in former case and in latter case
    respectively

E. Rieffel et al, ACM Computing Surveys, 32
(2000) ,300-335
24
Quantum network to prepare two and three particle
entangled states
H
Bell states
GHZ states
H
G. Brassard et al, Physics D, 120 (1998), 43-47
Quantum Teleportation and multiphoton
Entanglement, Thesis by J. W. Pan, Univ. of Sc.
And Tech., China
25
  • using single qubit operations and controlled not
    gates a suitable quantum
  • network can be constructed to produce maximally
    entangled states

e.g. Bell states for two particle system
C-NOT 12
H gate
1
Play a flash movie here for one of them)
input
output
  • in a similar way all the four Bell states can be
    visualized

26
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27
Entangled state analysis
  • photon 1 is in input mode e and photon 2 is in
    input mode f

state of photon 1
state of photon 2
g
e
Photon 1
Photon 2
f
h
  • each photon has the same probability to get
    either reflected or transmitted
  • by beam splitter

28
  • four different possibilities are

29
Teleportation
  • branch of quantum information processing
  • transmission of information and reconstruction
    of the quantum state
  • of the system over arbitrary distances
  • process in which an object disintegrates at one
    place and its perfect replica
  • occurs at some other location no cloning
  • techniques for moving things around, even in the
    absence of communication
  • channels linking the sender of quantum state to
    the recipient
  • process in which an object can be transported
    from one location to another
  • remote location without transferring the medium
    containing the unknown
  • information and without measuring the
    information content on either side of
  • transport

C. H. Bennett et al, Phys. Rev. Lett. 70 (1993),
1895-99
30
Bob (receiver)
Alice (sender)
  • Alice wants to communicate enough information
    about to Bob
  • how to do this?
  • quantum systems cannot be fully determined by
    measurements

31
2
3
Quantum carrier to be used
particle 2
particle 3
  • to couple her particle 1 with EPR pair Alice
    performs Bell state measurement
  • on her particles
  • complete state of three particles before Alices
    measurement is

32
  • measurement basis
  • expressing each direct product in
    Bell operator basis
  • all the four outcomes are equally likely,
    occurring with equal probability 1/4
  • having Alice tell Bob her measurement outcome,
    he can recover the
  • unknown state
  • If the outcome is Bob has to do nothing

33
  • in all other cases Bob has to use appropriate
    unitary transformation

34
Teleportation through gates
  • Quantum circuit for teleporting a qubit

here is the unknown state to be
teleported and M is probabilistic classical bit
G. Brassard et al, Physics D, 120 (1998), 43-47
35
  • the state input into the circuit is

where first two qubits belongs to Alice and third
qubit belongs to Bob
  • Alice sends her qubits through a C-NOT gate,
    obtaining
  • she then sends the first qubit through the
    Hadamard gate, obtaining

i.e.
36
  • depending on Alices measurements Bobs qubit
    will end up in one of
  • these four equally likely possible states with
    probabilities 1/4
  • if Alice performs a measurement and obtain a
    result then Bobs qubit
  • will be in state which is identical
    to input state with Alice

thus
  • knowing the measurement outcome Bob can fix up
    his state by the
  • application of appropriate gate operation as

37
C-NOT on qubit 12 with 3 remaining unchanged
The unitary transformation is
Use this in the next two transparencies!!
38
  • the state input into the circuit is

C-NOT
1-2
H gate on 1
39
(No Transcript)
40
Experimental Quantum Teleportation
Pictorial representation of original scheme
Click
D. Bouwmeester et al, Nature 390 (1997), 575
41
Pictorial representation of actual set-up
D. Bouwmeester et al, Nature 390 (1997), 575
P. G. Kwait et al, Phys. Rev. Lett. 75 (1995),
4337-4341
42
Application
  • quantum communication is centered on the ability
    to send data over large
  • distances quickly
  • teleportation has practical application in the
    field of quantum information
  • processing that hold promises for making
    computing both much faster and
  • secure
  • it exploits the concept of quantum entanglement
    which is at the heart of
  • quantum computing
  • during the process the quantum state of an
    object will be destroyed and not
  • the original object

43
The most obvious practical application of
teleportation is in cryptography. It can provide
a completely secure communication between two
distant components. Sending photons entangled in
a quantum state makes it impossible for an
eavesdropper to intercept the message because
even if intercepted the message would be
unintelligible unless it was intended for a
specific recipient.
44
I wish to thank Mr. Atul Kumar, my Ph. D. Scholar
for his enthusiasm to learn this and do further
research in this area.Thank you all.
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