Quantum information: the new frontier - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Quantum information: the new frontier

Description:

t = 1 'true' and f= 0 'false' Quantum bit ('qubit' ... but they dont tell us much about the original qubit, they are unusable crap. How can it be done? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:189
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 13
Provided by: svo6
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Quantum information: the new frontier


1
Quantum information the new frontier
  • Karl Svozil
  • TU Wien/Theoretical Physics
  • svozil_at_tuwien.ac.at

http//tph.tuwien.ac.at/svozil/publ/2000-qitnf.ht
m .ppt
2
Is Nature telling us something?
  • Clicks in a counter
  • Interpret them
  • as information
  • Maybe just trash,
  • maybe meaningful
  • Black box scheme

3
Formalization of quantum information
  • Classical bit code
  • t 1 true and f 0 false
  • Quantum bit (qubit)
  • xa atbf form a continuum, with
    a2b2 1, a,b in C
  • Coherent superposition of t and f

4
(In)Consistency
  • Quantum mechanics (so far consistently) achieves
    the implementation of classically inconsistent
    information into a single quantum bit.

5
Idea
  • Classically distinct (contradicting) information
    is represented at once by a single qubit and then
    piped through a quantum processor
  • I.e., 1 qubit may represent 21 bits
  • By combining qubits one can represent 2n
    classical bits by n qubits
  • Hope for exponential speedup!

6
Some qubit features
  • Qubits are contextual. A quantum bit may appear
    different, depending on the method by which it is
    inferred.
  • Qubits cannot be copied or cloned'' This due to
    the fact that the quantum evolution is
    reversible, i.e., one-to-one.
  • Qubits do not necessarily satisfy classical
    tautologies such as the distributive law.
  • Qubits are coherent superpositions of classically
    distinct, contradicting information.
  • Qubits are subject to complementarity.
  • Qubits obey quantum logic which is different from
    classical logic.

7
Complementarity and quantum cryptography
  • principal impossibility to measure two
    observables at the same time with arbitrary
    position. If you decide to precisely measure the
    first observable, you loose control'' over the
    second one and vice versa. By measuring one
    observable, the state of the system undergoes a
    state reduction'' or, expressed differently,
    the wave function collapses'' and becomes
    different from the original one. This randomizes
    a subsequent measurement of the second,
    complementary observable in performing the
    subsequent measurement, one obtains some
    measurement results (i.e., clicks, you
    remember?), but they dont tell us much about the
    original qubit, they are unusable crap.

8
How can it be done?
  • Assume that Alice sends Bob a qubit and an
    eavesdropper is present. This eavesdropper is in
    an inescapable dilemma neither can the qubit be
    copied, nor can it be measured. The former case
    is forbidden in quantum information theory and
    the letter case would result in a state reduction
    which modifies Alice's qubit to the point where
    it is nonsense for Bob. Bob and Alice can realize
    this by comparing some of their results over a
    classical (insecure) channel.

9
Quantum computing
  • Universal quantum
  • computation model
  • U(n) unitary
  • transformations in
  • n-dim Hilbert space
  • Universal U(2) gate
  • Factoring,...

10
Price of parallelism?
  • Readout problem
  • Coherence problem speedup compensated by
    exponential increase in hardware?
  • Realistic devices?

11
Finite automaton logic and automaton
complementarity
  • E. F. Moore, Svozil, Calude...
  • p1 º 1 On input 1, Bob receives the output
    symbol 1.
  • p2,3 º 2,3 On input 1, Bob receives the
    output symbol 0.
  • p2 º 2 On input 2, Bob receives the output
    symbol 1.
  • p1,3 º 1,3 On input 2, Bob receives the
    output symbol 0.
  • p3 º 3 On input 3, Bob receives the output
    symbol 1.
  • p1,2 º 1,2 On input 3, Bob receives the
    output symbol 0.

12
(No Transcript)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com