A novel non-Gaussianity measure based on the Wigner entropy
ORAL
Abstract
The enhanced phase-space characteristics of non-Gaussian states of light, albeit necessary for universal quantum computing, render their understanding and production challenging. In attempts to circumvent these difficulties, several works have introduced non-Gaussianity measures, i.e., quantities that assign a real number to states depending on their non-Gaussian content (Genoni et al., 2007, 2008). Based on the Wigner entropy (Van Herstraeten & Cerf, 2021), we introduce a new measure μ[W], which is the Wigner relative entropy between an arbitrary N-mode state and its Gaussian associate defined as
μ[W]= ∫ dNq dNp W(q, p) [ln W(q, p) - lnWG(q, p)].
Here, W(q, p) and WG(q, p) are the Wigner functions of the state and its Gaussian associate respectively. Our measure can be complex-valued, and we interpret its imaginary part as the negative volume of the Wigner quasi-probability distribution, while its real part provides information on other intrinsic properties of the state. We provide evidence that μ[W] is a valid non-Gaussianity measure, demonstrate its usefulness in representing states more perceptibly, and showcase its potential as a figure of merit for a photonic state engineering protocol involving conditional partial measurement (Pizzimenti et al., 2021).
μ[W]= ∫ dNq dNp W(q, p) [ln W(q, p) - lnWG(q, p)].
Here, W(q, p) and WG(q, p) are the Wigner functions of the state and its Gaussian associate respectively. Our measure can be complex-valued, and we interpret its imaginary part as the negative volume of the Wigner quasi-probability distribution, while its real part provides information on other intrinsic properties of the state. We provide evidence that μ[W] is a valid non-Gaussianity measure, demonstrate its usefulness in representing states more perceptibly, and showcase its potential as a figure of merit for a photonic state engineering protocol involving conditional partial measurement (Pizzimenti et al., 2021).
*P.D. acknowledges support from the Nicolaas Bloembergen Graduate Student Scholarship in Optical Science. Z.V.H. acknowledges support from the Belgian American Educational Foundation. A. J. P., S.C., and C. N. G. acknowledges National Science Foundation CCF, FET, Award No. 2122337.
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Presenters
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Andrew Pizzimenti
- University of Arizona