Simulation of Gaussian channels via teleportation with applications to error correction and secret-key capacities.
ORAL
Abstract
Gaussian channels are the typical way to model the decoherence in continuous-variable quantum states. It is known that those channels can be simulated by a teleportation protocol using as a resource state either a maximally entangled state passing through the same channel, i.e., the Choi-state, or a state that is entangled at least as much as the Choi-state. Since the construction of the Choi-state requires infinite mean energy and entanglement, i.e. it is unphysical, we derive instead every physical state able to simulate a given channel through teleportation with finite resources. Finally, we use those states to generalize a previously known error correction protocol by making it able to correct noise coming from thermal loss channels, and we also show how finite-energy resource states are able to provide tight upper bounds to the secret-key capacity of Gaussian channels.
arXiv.1803.03516 (Accepted - PRA)
arXiv.1808.00608 (Under Review - PRA)
arXiv.1803.03516 (Accepted - PRA)
arXiv.1808.00608 (Under Review - PRA)
*Australian Research Council (ARC) under the Centre of Excellence for Quantum Computation and Communication Technology (CE110001027)
EPSRC via the UK Quantum Communications Hub (EP/M013472/1).
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Presenters
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Spyros Tserkis
- School of Mathematics and Physics, University of Queensland